Good news! Less than a month into preparation, these 7 students won these two global awards!

Publish time:2020.04.10 Publisher:

 

Good News (1)

 

On January 2018, 1, the British Physics Olympiad Organizing Committee received good news: our school's students Gui Kailin, Du Jingyu, Zhu Kaili and Zhu Yingtong performed outstanding in the 10 British Physics Olympiad (BPHO) and each won a global bronze award! What is rare is that this is the first time that Meilun students have participated in international competitions, and the preparation time is less than a month before and after (students from other schools have more than one year to prepare for the exam), and it is gratifying to stand out among the world's outstanding middle school students and win the bronze award!

 

Good News (II)

 

On January 2018, 1, the Royal Society of Chemistry Competition Organizing Committee received good news: Cui Xiwen, Guo Zixiao, Zeng Ming, and Zhu Kaili from our school Outstanding performance in the 12 Royal Society of Chemistry Rising Star Challenge (RSC2017), each won a global bronze award! This is an international competition in which Meilun students form teams up with G3 and G10 students, which fully reflects students' independent learning ability and learning effect, congratulations! (Note: The finalists of this competition will have the opportunity to be invited by the British International Top Secondary School Student Science Forum, and our school, as an excellent organizer of the competition, has won 11 places to participate in the UK International Top Secondary School Student Science Forum in advance)

 

Contest Introduction

 

It is understood that the British Physics Olympiad began in 1979, and in 1983 officially selected the national team for the United Kingdom to participate in the international physics competition. The British Physics Olympiad organising committee is mainly composed of the University of Oxford, Physics England and the Odgen Foundation, and its office is located in the Department of Physics at the University of Oxford. The British Physics Olympiad attaches great importance to the flexible application of physics knowledge, and all the test titles are proof questions, which involve a wide range of knowledge points, and students need to use their physics knowledge to complete the challenge.

 

The chemistry competition "Top of the Bench" sponsored by the Royal Society of Chemistry has a history of 20 years and is one of the longest, most extensive and popular science competitions in British secondary schools. In order to adapt to the student level and organizational form of Chinese international schools, the Royal Society of Chemistry organized the "Chemistry Rising Star Challenge" specifically for students in China based on the competition format and propositional rules of "Top of the Bench". The competition is presented and judged by the Royal Society of Chemistry, and the results are officially certified, and the finalists will have the opportunity to be invited to the UK's top international science forum for secondary school students.