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Materials Science C
Posted: August 1st, 2013, 7:03 am
by Jim_R
Re: Materials Science C
Posted: September 6th, 2013, 7:52 pm
by a_srinivas
This should be real interesting.
Re: Materials Science C
Posted: November 1st, 2013, 8:57 pm
by technomario
Any tips on getting the lab done in a fast concise matter because last year my partner and I didn't finish.
Re: Materials Science C
Posted: November 7th, 2013, 4:02 am
by technomario
Wow this board is a bit barren compared to the others!
Re: Materials Science C
Posted: November 13th, 2013, 7:05 pm
by computergeek3
technomario wrote:Any tips on getting the lab done in a fast concise matter because last year my partner and I didn't finish.
Divide and conquer. I'm not trying to sound sarcastic, that really is the best way to do it.
Re: Materials Science C
Posted: November 14th, 2013, 3:29 pm
by bubbajuba
So, materials science is a lab/study event right? I read the rules and it stated that the event is 50% lab and 50% study.

Need Some Lab Practice?
Posted: November 23rd, 2013, 5:56 pm
by Mr_Lund
Greetings Material Scientists!
From what my team experienced last year (2013 season), Material Science seemed to be a bit of a curve ball for the coaches at invitationals. As there aren't many Material Science classes in high schools (from my experience, at least), it seemed very much that few coaches had labs that they could easily perform on the subject.
In an effort to help upgrade this, I'd like to point out the following website which I stumbled upon that has a plethora of excellent demonstrations, labs, and available kits that could be used to help practice the Material Science concepts, and/or generate a quality Material Science event at an Invitational.
The site is the American Ceramics Society website. Here is the main page:
www.ceramics.org
The very useful site I found in their pages is this one:
http://ceramics.org/acers-community/pre ... d-lab-kits
That site contains labs, teacher notes, discussion questions for each one, and more. The kits are available to purchase, however, many of the labs if you read through them involve materials that could easily be purchased at your local Meijer or Walmart. Some other materials are rather affordable through amazon or ebay. I've already in one day purchased the materials to complete four of these labs.
In a hope to keep this trend going, if you have any online resources that have been helpful, posting them would be a very appreciated form of a "thank you".
Students, bug your coaches to get the materials to do these labs/demos! It will be a great help!
Ever Forward,
Mr. Lund
Re: Materials Science C
Posted: December 6th, 2013, 4:25 pm
by sci3ntist
At our last tournament there was only a test. Is that supposed to happen?
Re: Materials Science C
Posted: December 22nd, 2013, 9:44 pm
by andrewwski
That does not seem to be the intent of the rules, but I suspect it happens quite frequently, especially if the tournament was an invitational.
It's difficult to find decent labs that can be run at tournaments with the equipment found in most high school labs.
Re: Materials Science C
Posted: December 25th, 2013, 9:31 pm
by andrewwski
On that note, do any national folks here know who maintains this page?
http://mypage.iu.edu/~lwoz/socrime/Modu ... iments.htm
It's the site linked as "resources for event supervisors" on soinc.org, but many of these are quite frankly terrible suggestions or are a very poor demonstration of the concepts they are trying to illustrate.