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17th Research Symposium promotes “STEM for All”

The 17th Harker Research Symposium on April 15 brought hundreds from the Harker community to the upper school campus to view student research, hear from fascinating speakers, explore a variety of booths and exhibits and more.

Opening speaker Janice Chen, co-founder and CTO of Mammoth Sciences, spoke on recent advances that have “really paved the way in helping us understand the relationship between our genes and our health.” Her talk covered, among other things, CRISPR sequences that have enabled key advances. “We’ve…been able to train our immune cells for instance, therapies to specifically find cancer cells while avoiding the healthy ones,” she said. “CRISPR is one of those breakthrough technologies that’s really making a difference in research and development.”

Rohit Vashisht, the morning keynote speaker, spoke on how data science can help address the disparity in the quality of healthcare in the United States, which negatively affects Black Americans, women and those who lack access to quality education, employment and housing. In his presentation, Vashisht covered his ongoing research in collecting and analyzing data across the country, efforts to curb inequalities in healthcare and methods to produce data that will result in more equitable decision-making.

Students and student clubs held several workshops during the day, including an introductory class on medical illustration, led by junior Anika Mantripragada and a beginner’s class on artificial intelligence held by the AI Club. Breakout sessions were held throughout the day, showcasing the research done by Harker upper school students, including Regeneron Science Talent Search semifinalists.

This year’s alumni speaker, Simar Bajaj ’20, presented on the importance of storytelling in passing good scientific policy. Bajaj, who has been involved in science journalism since 2020 and won Science Story of the Year from the Foreign Press association in December, discussed how facts and figures are not enough to sway public opinion. “The reality is that there was never a policy in the history of our country that would just pass because it was a good idea,” he said. “They pass because they’re able to open someone’s eyes, someone’s soul, to the impact, to the purpose.”

At a special alumni panel, Harker alums discussed the various ways their time at Harker led them to their current careers. Alison Rugar ’13 shared the story of how she discovered her love of science through softball. “Softball was actually the basis for my first science project, which I presented here at the Symposium,” she said. “As a pitcher, I depended really heavily on my curveball, and in order for breaking pitches to actually move when they cross the plate, you need to put a lot of spin on the ball…so my dad and I set out to measure how much spin I was putting on my pitches. We drilled a hole in a softball, stuck a magnet in, wound a coil of wire and used Faraday’s law of induction. And that was a really great experience. It gave me a lot of basic skills.”

Throughout the day, visitors headed to the auxiliary gym, where middle school students had set up posters to present their research, happily answering questions about their methods and findings. Younger attendees enjoyed the many activities set up at the STEM Buddies area, where stations were run by upper school students who guided the visitors through a series of fun experiments. During lunchtime, the much-loved chemistry magic show wowed the audience with eye-catching displays of various chemical reactions.

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Five students recognized in spring National Student Media Contest

Last weekend, five Harker students were awarded in the Journalism Education’s spring 2023 National Student Media Contest. Jessica Wang, grade 10, received a Superior award in Editorial Writing; junior Desiree Luo was given an Excellent award in the Sports Writing category; sophomore Felix Chen received an Excellent award in Press Law and Ethics; Mirabelle Feng, grade 10, was awarded Superior in Literary Magazine: Illustration; and senior Katie Wang received an Honorable Mention in Photography Portfolio.

National Student Media Contests are held twice a year in the fall and spring. Submissions are evaluated by a team of judges, whose critiques are made available to the students entering the competition. Winning entries receive awards at three levels: Superior, Excellent and Honorable Mention.

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Performing arts chair and alum catch up at South Bay Musical Theatre celebration

Laura Lang-Ree, Harker performing arts chair, and Ann Luceña ’04 both performed Saturday at South Bay Musical Theatre’s 60th anniversary celebration, “Welcome to the Sixties.” Lang-Ree sang a solo rendition of “See What It Gets You” from Stephen Sondheim’s “Anyone Can Whistle,” while Luceña was a part of a group that performed a medley of 1960s folk songs, including “Blowin’ in the Wind,” “Leaving on a Jet Plane,” and “Scarborough Fair/Canticle.” During her time at Harker, Luceña was a member of the middle school choral group, Harmonics. She most recently served as the CEO of San Ramon Regional Medical Center.

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Middle school mathletes perform well at state MathCounts competition

On March 25, a team of seven Harker students coached by middle school math teacher Vandana Kadam participated in the California State MathCounts competition held at the University of Pacific in Stockton. The competition included 166 top-performing students from the various chapter MathCounts competitions in Northern California. Harker’s team – Sylvia Chen, Shamik Khowala, Jonathan Li and Heather Wang, all grade 8 – did exceptionally well, placing third. Independent grade 7 competitors Vihaan Gupta, Aarav Mann and Andrew Shi also performed well.

In addition, Chen placed sixth and Gupta placed ninth in the individual competition, where every point differential made a significant difference in the rank.

Chen and Gupta also reached the finals of the Countdown Round, a rapid-fire oral buzzer round where students get 45 seconds to solve problems. Chen won by being the first to answer three out five questions correctly. The top sixteen performers (from the group of 166 mathletes) are invited to participate in this round. This is the first time in Harker’s MathCounts history that two Harker  students have participated in the final round of the Countdown competition.

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Students win Project of the Year at California Science and Engineering Fair

Alec Zhang, grade 11, and Jingjing Liang, grade 9, were recently awarded Project of the Year in the senior division at the California Science & Engineering Fair. Their project, titled “Development of an Innovative Eye-Tracking and Audio Hybrid System for ASD Early Detection,” won the pair the top prize of $5,000.

“We really appreciate the wonderful research programs at Harker, the intellectual vitality of the environment and the amazing mentors and peers at school to support us along this journey,” Zhang said. The two students plan to donate half of their winnings to science fairs serving underprivileged communities and the other half to youth with special needs.

Many other Harker students also performed well at CSEF.

Junior Division:

Brandon Labio, grade 8, Honorable Mention, Applied Mechanics and Structures

Nathan Yee, grade 8, Honorable Mention, Applied Mechanics and Structures

Anish Kosaraju, grade 8, Honorable Mention, Behavioral and Social Sciences

Daswani Siddhartha, grade 8, Fourth Place, Environmental Engineering

Venice Parnell, grade 8, Third Place, Materials Science

Claire Xu, grade 8, Third Place, Materials Science

Anya Bharti, grade 8, Fourth Place, Product Science

Nicki Yazdi, grade 8, Fourth Place, Product Science

Reshma Kosaraju, grade 11, First Place, Biochemistry/Molecular Biology

Sasha Masson, grade 11, First Place, Earth and Environmental Sciences

Ryan Zhang, grade 11, Honorable Mention, Environmental Engineering

Ella Yee, grade 11, Third Place, Mammalian Biology

Michelle Wei, grade 11, First Place, Mathematical Sciences

Kaitlyn Wang, grade 11, First Place, Physics and Astronomy

Andrew Liang, grade 10, Second Place, Zoology

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Middle school science teacher publishes newest entry in “Magical Periodic Table” series

Middle school science teacher Raji Swaminathan released her latest book on Sunday. The book is the seventh entry in Swaminathan’s “The Magical Periodic Table and the Element Girls” series, in which the main character, Atom, meets and learns about the various elements of the periodic table. Kindle Unlimited users have permanent free download access to the book.

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22nd Diana Nichols Math Invitational attracts 380 students

The 22nd annual Diana Nichols Harker Math Invitational for grades 6 to 8, held March 18, was a highly successful event with 18 schools and about 380 contestants taking part in individual and team contests. There were 60 competing and six non-competing teams for the team contest.

In individual competition, Harker’s Jeffery Wang placed fourth in the grade 7 category, while Hengrui Liang and Haofang Zhu took first and second, respectively, in the grade 8 category, with Zhu tying for second place.

In teams, Harker sixth graders Taddy Fujimura, Mark Han, Rafa deGoma, Ethan Weyn, Eric G. Zhang, Lucas Zhang and Jocelyn Zhao placed second in the grade 6 category. In the grade 8 category, Kevin Chen, Audrey Hu, Aaron Luo, Ryan Miao, Lily Peng, Sanjith Senthil and Haofang Zhu placed third.

The full results are found below.

Scores for individual winners have been placed in brackets with the total from actual questions followed by any bonus questions. All ties were broken according to difficulty level of questions.

Individual Event

Grade 6: 25 total possible points

Rank

Name of Student

Name of School

1

Charlie Huang (18 + 4)

The King’s Academy

2

Austin Jin (18 + 0)

BASIS Independent Silicon Valley

3

Katherine Li (17 + 2)

Kennedy Middle School

4

Keith Li (16 + 2)

BASIS Fremont

5

William Mao (16 + 2)

Stratford Preparatory, Blackford

Grade 7: 30 total possible points

Rank

Name of Student

Name of School

1

Michael Tang (24 + 4)

Miller Middle School

2

Sophia Fan (23 + 0)

Miller Middle School

3

Calvin Strohmann (22 + 2)

Kennedy Middle School

4

Jeffery Wang (22 + 1)

The Harker School

5

Henry Wang (22 + 0)

Miller Middle School

Grade 8: 30 total possible points

Rank

Name of Student

Name of School

1

Hengrui Liang (20 + 4)

The Harker School

2 (tie)

Haofang Zhu (20 + 1)

The Harker School

2 (tie)

Benjamin Zhang (20 + 0)

Miller Middle School

4

Ian Chen (19 + 2)

Miller Middle School

5

Ashmit Arasada (19 + 0)

Miller Middle School

Team Contest

Team Members

School

Place

Grade

Chloe Chen, Katherine Li, Brianna Su, Ashita Thakkar, Natalie Yao, Justin Zhang and Ella Zheng

Kennedy Middle School

6D

First

6

Taddy Fujimura, Mark Han, Rafa deGoma, Ethan Weyn, Eric G. Zhang, Lucas Zhang and Jocelyn Zhao

The Harker School

6P

Second

6

Emma Jin, Charlie Huang, Kaden Leong, Isaac Chi, Dylan wan, Fiona Wu and Aidan Zhang

The King’s Academy

6N

Third

6

Sophia Fan, Tanish Kolhe, Ishaan Mittal, Michael Tang, Henry Wang, Frank Xia and Hanyu Zhang

Miller Middle School

7J

First

7

Kevin Chen, Bryan Ge, Joseph He, Zheng Sheng He, Xuanyi Ma, Adya Seker and Calvin Strohmann

Kennedy Middle School

7G

Second

      7

Gopal Deshpande, Victoria Huang, Sean Huang, Catherine Jian, Tianlin Liu, Yunfei Xia and Leo Zhang

Miller Middle School

7K

Third

7

Ashmit Arasada, Andy Chen, Ian Chen, Christopher Lu, Nitin Vaka, Benjamin Zhang and Shannon Zhang

Miller Middle School

8G

First

8

Rehan Babu, Yutong Chen, Theeran Sathish Kumar, Qixuan Mu, Elaina Pan, Sohum Uttamchandani and Derek Wang

Kennedy Middle School

8F

Second

      8

Kevin Chen, Audrey Hu, Aaron Luo, Ryan Miao, Lily Peng, Sanjith Senthil and Haofang Zhu

The Harker School

8R

Third

8

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Alum’s plant-based product company highlighted in Forbes feature

Last week, Forbes’ Steven Savage published a story featuring Tara Chandra ’06’s company, Here We Flo, as one of three women-run companies selling plant-based consumer products to help reduce the use of plastics. Chandra and co-founder Susan Allen established Here We Flo, a feminine hygiene product company, in 2017 after meeting while pursuing master’s degrees at the London School of Economics. Here We Flo launched in the United States in 2020 and currently has three product lines.

Read the full story at Forbes.

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2023 Near and Mitra salons explore wide range of historical topics

Last week, the seniors participating in this year’s John Near & Mitra Family Scholar Grant Program conducted salons via Zoom, during which they discussed the results of the months they spent researching topics of their choice. Salons were held over three days, with three students featured on each day, presenting for the community with their mentors present.

Sabrina Zhu, the first of the presenters, examined the columns of Atlanta Constitution editor Ralph McGill and how they served as examples of the new journalism movement that became prominent in the 1960s and 70s. An editor for the Winged Post, Zhu said she has been fascinated with the history of journalism and how it can be a catalyst for social change.

During his time as an AP Spanish student, Alex Lan studied Peru and wrote a review of a Peruvian restaurant as part of an assignment to research a Spanish-speaking country. He then became interested in Peru’s “gastronomic revolution” and how it contributed to greater cultural exchange and the country’s economic recovery after its 20-year civil war.

While ensconced at home during the COVID-19 pandemic, Michelle Jin began watching the Korean TV drama “Crash Landing on You” and noticed that its two lead characters – one from South Korea and the other from North Korea – were speaking very different Korean dialects. This led her to explore how North Korea’s language reform campaign created differences in the language spoken in the two countries.

Sarah Fathima Mohammed’s original poetry about her experience as a Muslim spurred her to investigate the work of other Muslim poets and how their work was informed by their own identities. She then examined how Kenya-born poet Warsan Shire’s work spoke to the experience of Muslims in Nairobi, whose surveillance led to an internalized gaze that Mohammed compared to Foucault’s panopticon.

Another former AP Spanish student, Isha Moorjani, researched Argentina and Chile for her class assignment and became fascinated with how Indigenous languages impacted each country’s version of Spanish. In her talk, she explained how languages spoken by the Mapuche and Rapa Nui peoples influenced the Spanish spoken in modern Chile, as well as how their influence can be understood by examining the impact of Nahuatl on Mexican Spanish.

Stephen Xia started his story in the present day and worked backward to tell the story of housing activism in San Francisco’s Chinatown and Manilatown, starting with Chinese and Filipino immigration in the early 20th century. The focal point of his talk was the International Hotel, which was the subject of a large-scale protest in the 1960s when real estate corporations made plans to tear down the hotel, which would have displaced the building’s many elderly residents.

Mitra Scholar Emmett Chung explored the rise and fall of the die Republikaner party in Germany following the fall of the Berlin Wall, which he became interested in following a family trip to Germany. Chung explained how the party made anti-immigration sentiment a central part of its platform and made an effort to bring far-right politics into the mainstream, following up with their lasting impact on German politics and immigration policy.

Having lived in Japan from ages 2-4, Rahul Mulpuri became fascinated with Japanese culture at an early age and began studying Japanese in middle school. He also became involved in debate, where he learned about critical theory and critiqued the myth of the model minority, which has become a well-traveled stereotype of Asian-Americans. This led him to combine his interests into a research project that how Japanese-Americans interned during World War II helped rejuvenate the traditional Japanese music tradition as well as reignite general interest in Japanese music worldwide.

The final presenter, Austina Xu, contrasted the works of Allen Ginsberg and T.S. Eliot, using Ginsberg’s “Howl” as an example of a poem that expressed many of the same post-WWII anxieties as Eliot while eschewing Eliot’s elitism. She discovered an interest in slam poetry in her sophomore year and also became fascinated with the counterculture movements of the mid-20th century. She then delved into how the poetry of the Beat Generation may have led to the founding of slam poetry or “poetry for the people.”

All of this year’s salons can be viewed at Harker’s Vimeo page.

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Grade 1 donation drive delivers hundreds of goods to animals in need

Last week, first graders sent more than 500 items and more than $300 to the Humane Society Silicon Valley to cap off their annual donation drive. The effort ran from Feb. 28-March 10, collecting food, linens, toys and other goods for the many animals in HSSV’s care. “Our team was thrilled to receive the donations,” said Kristi Mack, HSSV’s human resources director. “Our team loved meeting all of your amazing first graders and their teachers. What a fun way to start a day learning about helping animals!”

Founded in 1929, HSSV is notable for being the world’s first model shelter, a distinction earned by meeting all of the more than 500 guidelines for animal care identified by the Association of Shelter Veterinarians. It operates 365 days a year, providing services such as adoption, affordable spaying and neutering, vaccinations and microchipping.

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