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Montgomery Blair High School's Online Student Newspaper
Jan. 29, 2010

Blazer named Intel Science Talent Search finalist

by Lauren Kestner, Online News and Copy Editor
Senior Yifan Li was recognized as a finalist in the national Intel Science Talent Search (STS) competition on Wednesday. Li will present his research project to a panel of scientists at the Intel Science Talent Institute in Washington, D.C. during a week-long conference in March to compete for the $100,000 first-place award.

Intel Representative Eric Weaver and Acting Principal Myriam Rogers present Li with a $7,500 check. Courtesy of MCPS
Intel Representative Eric Weaver and Acting Principal Myriam Rogers present Li with a $7,500 check.
Li was ecstatic upon learning that the Intel Foundation had named him a finalist in the competition. "My initial reaction, which lasted a good two or three minutes, was total shock," he said. "It was a very happy moment for me."

Li was one of 40 finalists selected from a pool of 300 semifinalists to compete from March 11 - 17, according to the Society for Science and the Public (SSP) web site. He is one of 15 Intel semifinalists from Montgomery County Public Schools (MCPS) - 12 from Blair and one each from Wootton, Richard Montgomery and Whitman high schools.

Li will receive an Intel-powered laptop computer and at least $7,500 in scholarship money. He has the chance to win additional prize money, including a $100,000 four-year college scholarship, based on his performance at the conference.

Li began his eight-week research project, titled "Differentiation of Mouse Embryonic Stem Cells into Retinal Pigment Epithelium Cells in Culture," in the Magnet program's Senior Research Project (SRP) class under the guidance of research coordinators Elizabeth Duval and Susan Ragan. "I basically took stem cells and exposed them to various conditions to make them turn into a kind of eye cell, which would be great for possible transplantation as a cure for certain forms of blindness," he said.

Li conferred with Dr. Lijin Dong, his mentor at the National Eye Institute (NEI), before deciding on a topic to investigate. "The National Eye Institute has always had interests in blindness, and I've considered stem cells a vast pool of potential for medical application," Li said. "It was pretty lucky that I managed to get a lab working on stem cells." Dong and Dr. Pinghu Liu, both scientists at the NEI, assisted Li with his labs and research paper.

Li plans to practice and refine his presentation in the weeks leading up to the March competition. "I want to make sure I know my project, its implications and all the background regarding retinal development inside out so I can field any question with confidence and accuracy," he said. "Frankly, I'm surprised I've gotten even this far…but now that I have, there's nowhere to aim but the top."

Discuss this Article

  • Yifan Fan =) on January 29, 2010 at 9:00 PM
    GO YIFANNNN!
  • Please on January 30, 2010 at 1:03 PM
    Please put the picture of Yifan that Mr. O took in this article!
  • awesome on January 30, 2010 at 6:14 PM
    Nice job Yifan! That is so cool, and your project sounds pretty interesting. Good luck with conference, and have fun getting an all expense paid trip to DC. Score!
  • 0.0 on January 30, 2010 at 9:24 PM
    What's up with six paragraphs starting with Li? Really. And it's extra confusing considering that Li Ma is an Intel semifinalist...
  • !!! on January 31, 2010 at 11:10 AM
    Congratulations, Yifan!!!
  • babyanca (View Email) on February 5, 2010 at 3:44 PM
    go job YAFANI!!!! to show respetct for our school nice keep it up.
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