Schools

Greenwich HS Student Named Intel Science Finalist

Stephen LeBreton has been chosen as one of 40 high school students around the country to compete in the Intel Science Talent Search competition.

 

Greenwich High School senior Stephen LeBreton has been named one of 40 finalists in the Intel Science Talent Search (Intel STS), the nation's most prestigious pre-college science competition.

Finalists will gather in Washington, D.C. in March to compete for $630,000 in awards with the top winner receiving $100,000 from the Intel Foundation. The 40 finalists—announced Wednesday morning—were selected from 300 semifinalists and more than 1,700 entrants from across the country.

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LeBreton's project is titled ''In Vivo Regeneration of Tooth Enamel using an Innovative Hydrophilic Polymer-Coated Retainer.'' He is a student of Andrew Bramante who teaches the Independent Science Research course at GHS.

LeBreton, who is weighing his college options, is interested in biologicial sciences and biomedical engineering, his mother Linda LeBreton, told Greenwich Patch Wednesday morning. He is the only student from Connecticut chosen a finalist.

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The 17-year-old LeBreton is one of two GHS students who were named semi-finalists for the competition. Student Annie Zhang's project—Graphene Oxide as a Novel Biosensor in Targeted Delivery of Chemotherapy Drugs—had been selected a semi-finalist project.

Finalists will gather in Washington, D.C. for the week-long judging process from March 7-13, where they also will meet with national leaders. In past years, this has included a visit with the president of the United States, interaction with preeminent scientists and display of their research to the public at the National Geographic Society. Top winners will be announced at a black-tie gala awards ceremony at the National Building Museum on March 12.

Science Talent Search alumni have gone on to win seven Nobel Prizes, two Fields Medals, five National Medals of Science, 11 MacArthur Foundation Fellowships and even an Academy Award for Best Actress, according to Intel which has sponsored the competition for 15 years.

Other finalists from the region include:

  • Daniel McQuaid of Ossining (NY) High School—"Identification of post-translational regulation sites on the KLF6 tumor suppressor as novel targets for cancer therapies;" 
  • Jiayi Peng of Horace Greeley High School in Chappaqua, NY—"A Cellular Automaton Model for Critical Dynamics in Neuronal Networks," and
  • Chris Traver of Croton-Harmon High School in Croton-on-Hudson, NY—"Investigating Noise Pollution Using Smartphones and Citizen Scientists."


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