Registration Opens Wednesday for 25th Department of Energy’s National Science Bowl®

Washington, D.C. – Teams of high school and middle school students across the country can register beginning Wednesday, Oct. 1 to compete in the 25th Department of Energy's National Science Bowl® (NSB). Thousands of students compete in the contest annually and it has grown into one of the largest academic math and science competitions in the country.

The top two high school teams nationwide win educational adventure trips and the top middle and high school teams win money for their schools' science departments.

"We encourage all students interested in science and math to form teams to compete in this year's National Science Bowl," said Patricia M. Dehmer, Acting Director of the DOE Office of Science, which manages the National Science Bowl® and sponsors the NSB finals competition. "This has become one of the premiere science academic competitions in the United States, and it showcases our brightest students who will go on to become leaders in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics."

Teams of students can sign up to participate in the NSB by registering with the coordinator for their local competition, which they can find on the NSB website here. Separate competitions are held for high school and middle school students. Regional competitions for each area typically last one or two days and take place throughout the country between January and March.

During the regional and national competitions, students participate in a fast-paced verbal forum to solve technical problems and answer questions from all branches of science and math. Each team is composed of four or five students and a teacher who serves as a coach. Teams can find sample questions on the NSB website to help prepare for the competitions.

The winning team from each qualifying regional competition will receive an all-expenses-paid trip to compete in the National Finals held in Washington, D.C., from April 30 to May 4, 2015. The national events include several days of science activities, sightseeing, and competitions. As part of the National Finals, middle school students design and race lithium ion battery-powered model cars. High school students compete in team science challenges in addition to participating in the academic competition.

The prizes for the top two high school teams for the 2015 NSB will be announced at a later date. The high school team that won the 2014 NSB received a nine-day, all-expenses-paid science trip to Alaska, where they learned more about glaciology, marine and avian biology, geology, and plate tectonics. The second-place high school team at the 2014 NSB won a five-day, guided adventure tour of several national parks, which included a whitewater rafting trip.

The top 16 high school teams and the top eight middle school teams in the National Championship also win $1,000 for their school's science department.

Last year, approximately 14,500 high school and middle school students from all 50 states, the District of Columbia, and Puerto Rico competed in the NSB.

DOE created the National Science Bowl® in 1991 to encourage students to excel in mathematics and science and to pursue careers in these fields. Approximately 240,000 students have participated in the competition since it began.