- North Carolina Science Festival
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North Carolina Science Festival Abbreviation NCSF Formation September 11, 2010 Purpose/focus STEM outreach and education Headquarters Chapel Hill, North Carolina Region served North Carolina Parent organization Morehead Planetarium and Science Center, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Affiliations USA Science & Engineering Festival Website www.ncsciencefestival.org The North Carolina Science Festival (NCSF) is a multi-week event encompassing hundreds[citation needed] of science education and outreach events throughout the state of North Carolina. The festival is organized by Morehead Planetarium and Science Center in Chapel Hill, N.C., and highlights the educational, cultural and economic impact[citation needed] of science in the state. NCSF events include hands-on activities, talks, lab tours, exhibits and performances for all ages.[citation needed]
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Inaugural North Carolina Science Festival, 2010
The first North Carolina Science Festival was held Sept. 11-26, 2010, featuring Bugfest at the North Carolina Museum of Natural History as its kick-off event. [1] The festival coordinated with the USA Science and Engineering Festival and Observe the Moon night[2]
Many of the festival's 413[citation needed] scheduled activities were hosted by museums and universities. Some were hosted by businesses with science connections; for example, North Carolina's wine industry was showcased in events featuring the science of winemaking.[3] The University of North Carolina hosted Jamie Hyneman and Adam Savage of Mythbusters for a program at the Smith Center with nearly 5,000 in attendance.[3][4]. East Carolina University and Go-Science hosted more than 2,000 participants[citation needed] for the Eastern Regional Science Expo with exhibitions and demonstrations. The festival concluded with the UNC Science Expo at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.[5]
The inaugural festival offered programs at 89 participating organizations, with 22 percent of these programs in the mountain region, 63 percent in the piedmont region and 15 percent in the coastal region. As of Oct. 7, 2010, 60 host organizations had already reported attendance for 98 events totalling 89,494 participants.[citation needed]
Sponsors for the 2010 North Carolina Science Festival were Burroughs Wellcome Fund, Time Warner Cable and SAS (platinum level); Biogen Idec, Lenovo, Magellan Science, The News & Observer and UNC Health Care (gold level); Inspire Pharmaceuticals, NC STEM Community Collaborative and UNC School of Education (silver level); BB&T, The Research Triangle Park, Life Technologies Foundation, Dr. Nicholas B. Duck and family and the NC GlaxoSmithKline Foundation (bronze level); with WRAL-TV5 and GoAskMom on WRAL.com as media sponsors.
Although no plans are confirmed at this time, the next North Carolina Science Festival is tentatively scheduled for April 2012.
NCSF Board of Advisors
The NCSF Board of Advisors comprises leaders from business, government and education who are charged with developing the festival as a permanent and sustainable program for North Carolina. As of October 2010, board members are:
- Chancellor Emeritus James Moeser, UNC-Chapel Hill -- chair
- Chancellor John Bardo, Western Carolina University
- President Erskine Bowles, University of North Carolina System
- John Burris, Ph.D., Burroughs Wellcome Fund
- Alfred Childers, Ph.D., Magellan Science.org
- Joseph DeSimone, Ph.D., UNC-Chapel Hill and North Carolina State University
- Lew Ebert, North Carolina Chamber
- Marilyn Foote-Hudson, NC GlaxoSmithKline Foundation
- President Emeritus William Friday, University of North Carolina System
- Ann B. Goodnight, SAS
- Senator Howard Lee, NC Education Cabinet
- The Honorable Beverly Perdue, Governor of the State of North Carolina
- Roger Perry Sr., East West Partners
- President Scott Ralls, NC Community College System
- Charles Sanders, M.D., retired CEO, GlaxoSmithKline
- Christy Shaffer, Ph.D., retired president, Inspire Pharmaceuticals
- Senator Richard Stevens, NC General Assembly
- Chancellor Randolph Woodson, North Carolina State University
References
- ^ "About NC Science Fest". Morehead Planetatrium and Science Center. http://www.ncsciencefestival.org/about/.
- ^ "'Observe The Moon Night' at PARI". Asheville Citizen. 18 September 2010. http://www.citizen-times.com/article/20100918/NEWS/309180004/1004/ADVERTISING. Retrieved 19 September 2010.
- ^ a b Harrison, Michael (August 31, 2010). "MythBusters to Headline North Carolina Science Festival". Wired. http://www.wired.com/geekdad/2010/08/mythbusters-to-headline-north-carolina-science-festival/.
- ^ "Mythbusters Make Their Way to Chapel Hill". WCHL. 18 September 2010. http://www.wchl1360.com/details.html?id=15917. Retrieved 19 September 2010.
- ^ Hall, Sarah Lindenfeld. "Weekend Plans: BugFest, Star Wars guys, festivals and more". WRAL. http://www.wral.com/lifestyles/goaskmom/blogpost/8259206/.
External links
Categories:- Science festivals
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