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Why not Pakistani or Bangladeshis??????

Nafees

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8 Indian-American finalists for 'junior Nobel Prize'

NEW YORK: Eight Indian-American high school students, five of them girls, have been named among 40 finalists for the Intel Science Talent Search 2008 contest.

The competition, now in its 67th year, has been sponsored by the Intel Corporation for the past 10 years. Winners of the competition have gone on to receive over 100 of the world's most coveted science and math honours, including six Nobel prizes.

Avanthi Raghavan, Shravani Mikkilineni, Hamsa Sridhar, Shivani Sud, Isha Jain, Vinay Venkatesh Ramasesh, Ashok Chandran and Ayon Sen get at least $5,000 in scholarships and a laptop. They will next compete for 10 scholarships - including the top award of $100,000 - in March in Washington, DC.

The eight talented students were selected Wednesday from over 1,600 individual entrants for the nationwide competition, often called the "junior Nobel prize", administered annually by the Washington based Society for Science & the Public.

"A high proportion of Indian-American finalists speaks well for the community, and we welcome their participation," Rick Bates, spokesperson for the organisers, said.

The project Ashok Chandran, 17, of Nesconset, New York, submitted for the competition, studied the link between smoking and breast cancer. He tested the hypothesis that nicotine would alter mammary cell gene expression, creating a cellular environment akin to that of a breast cancer cell.

Isha Himani Jain, 17, of Bethlehem, Pennsylvania, has identified a cellular mechanism underlying bone growth spurts in zebra fish, similar to the way children's bones grow. She had also won, in October, a $100,000 scholarship topping the Siemens Competition in Math, Science and Technology for the same study, which has been published in a journal.

Avanthi Raghavan, 17, of Orlando, Florida, submitted a project studying the mechanisms of protein transport critical to the survival and virulence of the malaria parasite, which accounts for over two million deaths every year.

The project of Shivani Sud, 17, of Durham, North Carolina, focuses on identifying stage II colon cancer patients at high risk of recurrence and the best therapeutic agents for treating their tumours.

Hamsa Sridhar, 18, of Kings Park, New York, developed a low cost optical tweezers system that uses laser light to trap and suspend microscopic particles.

Ayon Sen, 17, of Austin, Texas, investigated the natural processes by which the ocean transports heat. He developed a MATLAB software interface for deep-water ocean current velocity data and integrated it with surface water velocity data from satellite altimeters.

Vinay Venkatesh Ramasesh, 18, of Fort Worth, Texas, submitted a chemistry project involving algorithms to accurately determine molecular thermodynamic properties of large molecules, such as proteins.

Shravani Mikkilineni, 17, of Bloomfield Hills, Michigan, studied the computation of continued fraction expansions of the square roots of positive integers.

Source: NDTV

"Why not Pakistani or Bangladeshis are ahead of them. Pakistanis and Bangladeshis plz make the statement on it?"
 
What a perverted mentality...Why are not Bangladeshi's and Pakistani's ahead of Indians..Pathetic.
 
Nafees,

Not the right way to look at things, lets be proud of our youth and hope they'll build better and stronger bridges between our countries than we have.
Btw IIRC last year some Pakistani kid made it to the finals.
 
I second Neo's comments.

Looking at simple numbers never presents the correct picture however. Assuming all men to be created equal, why the discrepancy?

The Indian American population numbers about three million, the Pakistani American population a little over 200,000 - so there is obviously a larger talent pool to choose from. Additionally, you would have to consider the background of the immigrants - is a higher percentage of the Indian immigrant population highly skilled/educated? - Therefore possibly passing on those values of pursuing higher education, studying hard to succeed etc. to their children.

Just some thoughts.
 
Pakistan has just started doing well in education.Pakistan holds the world record for the youngest MCP of the world.

Afrah Shafquat become WORLD’S YOUNGEST SCJP (SUN CERTIFIED JAVA PROGRAMMER)
On 14th February 2002 at the age of 11 years 5 months and 19 days(she is from my school so i m happy for her)

Abdullah Zafar Al-Syed, a Pakistani pupil of Manarat Boys English School of Riyadh has secured all A* grades in all 8-subjects he appeared. This unparalleled feat he achieved at the age of 14 only.

Babar Iqbal participated in the examination of Certified Virus Network Administrator (CVNA) and grabbed a world record by obtaining 80 percent marks in it. He is the youngest world record holder in the computer field and has also qualified for the trainers programme.

Bangladeshi student Rezwan Haque achieved eleven A's in his ordinary level exams apart from another individual from Pakistan, no one else has got eleven 'A' grades in the Cambridge Board Ordinary Levels in the May session.


so we r catching up man dont worry
 
"Why not Pakistani or Bangladeshis are ahead of them. Pakistanis and Bangladeshis plz make the statement on it?"

Read the article again:

Indian-American high school student.

India didn't funded them, nor they educated them.

In th end they are Americans.
 
Additionally, you would have to consider the background of the immigrants - is a higher percentage of the Indian immigrant population highly skilled/educated? - Therefore possibly passing on those values of pursuing higher education, studying hard to succeed etc. to their children.

Just some thoughts.
Also add to this resources. While all of us are enamored and inspired by the occasional romantic Ramanujam type scenario portrayed in a Good Will Hunting format, it is fairly clear that success is also highly dependent upon the availability of resources (there may not be a directly proportional relationship with a fixed constant, but certainly a correlation) . The Indian diaspora is known to be one of the (if not the most) wealthiest immigrant group in the USA. So although I'm not trying to cast a shadow on the brilliance and the good work ethic of these children, I think the resources available to them certainly play a part.
 
Read the article again:

Indian-American high school student.

India didn't funded them, nor they educated them.

In th end they are Americans.

Well said. These people were not representing anyone government.
 

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