START EARLY!
Many students begin planning their research at the end of the
school year so that they can conduct research during the summer
and fall.
- Decide which science fair you are going to enter:
- Attend a science fair clinic (many regional fairs offer clinics
in the fall, ask your teacher.)
- Find a topic that interests you and research what is already
known about the topic.
- Narrow the topic to a specific scientific problem and develop
an experiment to solve that problem. (See the
Science Research and the Process of Science to help plan your experiment.)
- Discuss the project with your parents and teacher and review
with them the ISEF Rules and
Regulations, noting the specific rules that might apply
to your type of research (i.e. are you working with human subjects
or animals or working with hazardous substances?).
- Develop a hypothesis (Scientific Method) and develop a procedure.
- Write a detailed research plan about how you will conduct
the research and complete the required
Intel ISEF forms and any additional local science fair
forms required. You then must obtain the appropriate approvals
as needed before the start of experimentation. This may involve
being reviewed by your local Institutional Review Board (IRB)
or Scientific Review Committee (SRC).
- Once your approvals and forms are in order, begin your experimentation
following your research plan and any revisions that those supervising
or approving your research have recommended.
- Make observations and collect data in a project journal (all
participants must keep a journal)
- Interpret the data and observations
- Draw conclusions
- Finalize your project for presentation.
- Write the research paper and abstract (Intel
ISEF does not require a research paper, some regional fairs
do require it; check with your teacher or with your regional
fair rules and handbook.)
- Create the project exhibit board being sure to follow the Display
and Safety Regulations.
- Practice your presentation and prepare to answer judges'
questions.
- Present the project at your school Science Fair, and/or your
regional Intel ISEF-affiliated fair.
