2015 SCIENCE FAIR RULES AND REGISTRATION FORMS



Ethics Statement



Scientific fraud and misconduct are not condoned at any level of research or competition. This includes plagiarism, forgery, use or presentation of other researcher’s work as one’s own and fabrication of data. Fraudulent projects will fail to qualify for competition in affiliated fairs and the Intel ISEF. Society for Science & the Public reserves the right to revoke recognition of a project subsequently found to have been fraudulent.



Eligibility/Limitations



  1. Each ISEF-affiliated fair may send the number of projects provided by their affiliation agreement.

  2. A student must be selected by an Intel ISEF-affiliated fair, and:

    1. be in grades 9-12 or equivalent;
    2. not have reached age 20 on or before May 1 preceding the Intel ISEF.

  3. Each student is only allowed to enter one project. That project may include no more than 12 months of continuous research and may not include research performed before January 2014.

  4. Students may compete in only one Intel ISEF affiliated fair, except when proceeding to a state/national fair affiliated with the Intel ISEF from an affiliated regional fair.

  5. Projects that are demonstrations, ‘library’ research or informational projects, ‘explanation’ models or kit building are not appropriate for the Intel ISEF.

  6. All sciences (physical, life, social) are represented at the Intel ISEF. Review a complete list of categories and sub-categories with definitions.

  7. A research project may be a part of a larger study performed by professional scientists, but the project presented by the student must be only their own portion of the complete study.




Requirements General



  1. All domestic and international students competing in an ISEF-affiliated fair must adhere to all of the rules as set forth in this document.

  2. All projects must adhere to the Ethics Statement above.

  3. All projects must adhere to the requirements of the affiliated fair(s) in which it competes to qualify for participation in the Intel ISEF. Knowledge of these requirements is the responsibility of the student and the Adult Sponsor.

  4. Projects must adhere to local, state and U.S. Federal laws, regulations and permitting conditions. In addition, projects conducted outside the U.S. must also adhere to the laws of the country and jurisdiction in which the project was performed.

  5. The use of non-animal research methods and the use of alternatives to animal research are strongly encouraged and must be explored before conducting a vertebrate animal project.

  6. Introduction or disposal of non-native and/or invasive species (e.g. insects, plants, invertebrates, vertebrates), pathogens, toxic chemicals or foreign substances into the environment is prohibited. It is recommended that students reference their local, state or national regulations and quarantine lists.

  7. Intel ISEF exhibits must adhere to Intel ISEF display and safety requirements.

  8. It is the responsibility of the student and the adult sponsor to check with their affiliated fair for any additional restrictions or requirements.



Approval and Documentation



  1. Before experimentation begins, a local or regional Institutional Review Board (IRB) or Scientific Review Committee (SRC) associated with the Intel ISEF-affiliated fair must review and approve most projects involving human participants, vertebrate animals, and potentially hazardous biological agents.

  2. Every student must first complete Sussex County Science Fair Registration Form 2015.

  3. Every student must complete the Student Checklist (1A), a Research Plan and Approval Form (1B) and review the project with the Adult Sponsor in coordination with completion by the Adult Sponsor of the Checklist for Adult Sponsor (1).

  4. A Qualified Scientist (2) is required for all studies involving BSL-2 potentially hazardous biological agents and DEA-controlled substances and is also required for many human participant studies and many vertebrate animal studies.

  5. After initial IRB/SRC approval (if required), any proposed changes in the Student Checklist (1A) and Research Plan must be re-approved before laboratory experimentation/data collection resumes.

  6. Projects which are continuations of a previous year’s work and which require IRB/SRC approval must undergo the review process with the current year proposal prior to experimentation/data collection for the current year.

  7. Any continuing project must document that the additional research is new and different. (See Continuation Projects Form (7)).

  8. If work was conducted in a regulated research institution, industrial setting or any work site other than home, school or field at any time during the current ISEF project year, the Regulated Research Institutional/Industrial Setting Form (1C) must be completed and displayed at the project booth.

  9. After experimentation, each student must submit a (maximum) 250-word, one-page abstract that summarizes the current year’s work. The abstract must describe research conducted by the student, not by the supervising adult(s).

  10. A project data book and research paper are not required, but are recommended. Regional or local fairs may require a project data book and/or a research paper.

  11. All signed forms, certifications, and permits must be available for review by all regional, state, national and international affiliated fair SRCs in which the student(s) participate. This review must occur after experimentation and before competition.



Continuation/Research Progression of Projects



  1. As in the professional world, research projects may build on work performed previously. A valid continuation project is a sound scientific endeavor. Students will be judged only on laboratory experiment/data collection performed over 12 continuous months beginning no earlier than January 2014 and ending May 2015.

  2. Any project based on the student’s prior research could be considered a continuation/ research progression project. These projects must document that the additional research is a substantive expansion from prior work (e.g. testing a new variable or new line of investigation.) Repetition of previous experimentation with the same methodology and research question, even with an increased sample size, is an example of an unacceptable continuation.

  3. Display board and abstract must reflect the current year’s work only. The project title displayed in the Finalist’s booth may mention years (for example, “Year Two of an Ongoing Study”). Supporting data books (not research papers) from previous related research may be exhibited if properly labeled as such.

  4. Longitudinal studies are permitted as an acceptable continuation under the following conditions:

    1. The study is a multi-year study testing or documenting the same variables in which time is a critical variable. (Examples: Effect of high rain or drought on soil in a given basin, return of flora and fauna in a burned area over time.)
    2. Each consecutive year must demonstrate time-based change.
    3. The display board must be based on collective past conclusionary data and its comparison to the current year data set. No raw data from previous years may be displayed.

  5. All projects must be reviewed and approved each year and forms must be completed for the new year. NOTE: For competition in the Intel ISEF, the Continuation/ Research Progression Project Form (7) is required for projects in the same field of study as a previous project. This form must be displayed at the project booth. Retention of all prior years’ paperwork is required and must be presented to the Intel ISEF SRC upon request.