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Virtual Fair Template

  • Click on “make a copy” in the file menu to make your own copy of the template that you can edit.
  • Go through each page and replace the text with your own project information.
  • Each slide gives instruction about how many words can be on a page or if pictures should be used.
  • You may leave the template black and white or change it to a different theme—there are no points awarded for the background design.
  • The last slide has directions on how to submit your project using the Google Form.
  • Please delete this slide before you share your virtual fair project.

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Project Title

Student Name(s)

School

Grade(s)

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Question/Engineering Problem

  • An excellent question or engineering problem will be interesting, creative, worded scientifically and relevant to the world today. Your slide should also include your thought process and preliminary research on why you selected the question or problem. (250 Word max, no pictures on this slide) Find a question that interests you about something that you have observed, noticed or wondered about.

School Project Title

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Research

  • Excellent students will undertake research to help them shape their question and hypothesis and to put their work into a relevant, real-world context.
  • Engineering/Inventions show research on how new product will meet a need better than an existing product, how it fills a need. (500 Word max, no pictures on this slide/page)
  • Figure out what others have found out about your subject area or question. How has your research helped you to refine your question and ask something that may not be unique, but is relevant and interesting and not already answered.

School Project Title

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Hypothesis/Design Goal

  • An excellent hypothesis will lead on from the question, be tightly focused and build on existing knowledge and be testable. A hypothesis should be a concise 1 or 2 sentences.

  • An Engineering/Invention project will have a design goal instead of hypothesis (no pictures on this slide/page).
  • What is your hypothesis? Try to address something that you believe is challenging which you are able to answer in a single experiment. Example: If I give different amounts of fertilizer to bean plants, then the plant that receives the most fertilizer will grow the tallest because fertilizer provides plants with nitrogen. Nitrogen is an important nutrient for plants because it is used by plants to grow new stems and leaves.

School Project Title

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Experiment/Design Process

  • Excellent students will demonstrate that they have used good experimental techniques and describe their experiment clearly and in detail. Multiple trials are an expectation of good experimentation. Should include a summary explaining the procedures, variables, materials, & testing/experimental trials.
  • Engineering/Invention should show schematics, assembly information, refining of design, prototyping.

  • Pictures are very appropriate on this slide/page-multiple slides/pages OK.
  • Design and execute an experiment that tests your hypothesis. Include descriptions of the materials, equipment, and methods/techniques you used. Explain the variables and how they will be controlled, manipulated and measured. Also detail any key steps to avoid errors, risks and safety.

School Project Title

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Data/Observations

  • Excellent data will be relevant, sufficient to support a conclusion and should be recorded accurately and precisely, and be presented clearly. �-Excellent observations will describe patterns or trends supported by the data. -Engineering/Invention project show evidence of testing, applications of invention.
  • Multiple slides may be used to show data/observations, pictures and graphs are appropriate.
  • Report on all of the data, numbers, outputs or outcomes from your experiment. Show an understanding of what you saw happening during your experiment. Describe the patterns and trends you saw emerge as you worked.

School Project Title

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Conclusion

  • An excellent conclusion will explain how the experiment answers the question or why it fails to do so and whether or not it supports the hypothesis.
  • Engineering projects explain how the device/invention solves the project. (500 Word Max, no pictures on this slide/page).
  • How did your experiment support or contradict your original hypothesis? How could you improve your experiment (or redesign your device)? Did everything go as planned or were there unexpected results? Does what you learned lead to a new question to ask or experiment that would answer it? Do you have new ideas to refine your invention? If so, why would it be important, interesting, or useful to do?

School Project Title

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Works Cited

  • Excellent students will acknowledge and provide clear references for sources of information that they have consulted and/or referenced and acknowledge any assistance received (e.g. to find equipment and materials, to stay safe or to use unfamiliar equipment or techniques).

  • This page is only for the virtual fair since it would usually be found in the student’s science notebook. Use a bibliography generator such as citationmachine.net to document articles you read, people you interviewed etc.

School Project Title

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How to Submit Your Virtual Fair Slides

  • Be sure to name your slideshow [School_Project Name]
  • If you didn’t use Google slides, then make sure you have moved your slideshow into your GSD Google drive so that you can get a shareable link to the slideshow.

  • Get a shareable link for your slideshow
    • Push the share button
    • Choose get shareable link
    • Copy the link

  • Fill out the Google Form for submitting virtual fair slides.
    • Fill in the required information
    • Paste your link in the Google Form