Washington23 »Politics
Print

New Faces, New Solutions

Today, First Lady Michelle Obama and I have the distinct pleasure of lending a hand at the National Science Bowl – an impressive display of the scientific talents of our young people. Over the past few days, students from sixty-eight high school teams and thirty-seven middle school teams have competed for the championship titles by answering questions in a range of scientific disciplines, including biology, chemistry, earth science, physics and astronomy, and math.

First Lady Michelle Obama and Energy Secretary Steven Chu with the winning teams, North Carolina School of Science and Mathmatics, left, and Albuquerque Academy, right, at the 20th Annual National Science Bowl in Washington, D.C.

I have been going to Science Bowls for many years, and I always come away hopeful for America's future. I know the First Lady would agree that the knowledge and dedication of these students is inspiring. Read the First Lady's remarks here.
Competitions like this one are important because America's leadership tomorrow depends on how we educate our students today. We need a bold new generation of scientists and engineers to make America competitive in this century. Only by having our best and brightest young people pursue careers in science and engineering can America compete for the high-wage, high-tech jobs of the 21st century. We also face an unprecedented challenge to our very way of life from a changing climate, and we need this generation to help find new solutions to the energy and climate problem. In fact, all of the great challenges we will face in this century will require science and innovation to meet them.

First Lady Michelle Obama and Energy Secretary Steven Chu ask the championship round bonus point questions at the Department’s 20th Annual National Science Bowl in Washington, D.C.

Members of the middle school team from Albuquerque Academy answer a question during the National Science Bowl in Washington, D.C.

Students, coaches and parents takes photos of First Lady Michelle Obama at the National Science in Washington, D.C.

Steven Chu is the Secretary of Energy
Stay Connected on Facebook.

Source: White House.gov Blog Feed

No comments

Leave a comment

Image Navigator

Google trackpad patent hints at Android for desktopsWhite House White Board: The President in Asia & the National Export InitiativePresident Obama’s Picks for the 2012 NCAA Women’s Basketball TournamentTE Start Sit Week 9: Efficiency is EverythingHip-Hop World Loses Gang Starr’s GuruNews Flash! India Still Pakistan’s BogeymanPresident Obama Meets with Prime Minister Noda of Japan[Review] MotorStorm RC for the PlayStation VitaEconomics Journal: The Right to Rotting Food, Inefficiently DeliveredToshiba Thrive 7, Another Netbook — Sorry, TabletSilhouetter Turns Your Photos into iPod AdsFujitsu outs their quad-core Android 4.0 superphone – Update: Photos and specsRdio launches embedded player, but you need a subscription to listen to the tunesThe Vaselines to Release First New Album in 20 YearsJotly For Android – Everything About Your Life Is Exciting. To Everyone. [Humor]Sprint’s Officially Done Creating WiMax PhonesIndia Journal: Why the Big Fuss About Starbucks in India?Mid-Range Samsung i857 for AT&T to Be Known as DoubletimeHands On With HTC’s New Evo, Sprint’s Flagship Android PhoneTemple Run Updated In The Play Store – Fixes Support For Ice Cream Sandwich DevicesGoogle Drive spotted during Android Developers’ Hangout (and I was right there!)Album Review: Various Artists – ‘La Soga Soundtrack’ (Premium Latin Music)ICO/Shadow of the Colossus Collection: Here’s your bonus content and trophies!Uniquely Android: Shush!Why the Hell Do You People Still Drive?Twitter signs Gnip to provide firehose access for $360,000/yearThere's a New Sheriff in TownMonday's intriguing peopledavidbankscnn
		Sylvester Stallone