California Science & Engineering Fair
Changes for 2019

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The California Science & Engineering Fair strives continually to improve the quality of the event for its participants throughout the State of California. As part of these ongoing efforts the changes listed below will be implemented in 2019. Some of these changes were discussed at the last Affiliated Fairs Conference which was held during the 2018 California Science & Engineering Fair.


Operations
Fair Date
Intel ISEF Affiliation
Research Review Process Revised
PROS Form Discontinued
Annual Update
Project Allocations for 2019
Broadcom MASTERS Competition
Recent Changes (from previous Fairs)
Application Fee Waiver (2018)
Single Awards Ceremony — Closed to the Public (2017)
Simplified Deadline (2017)
Earlier Rolling Acceptances (2016)

Fair Date

For 2019 the California Science & Engineering Fair will take place on April 29-30. As usual, the fair will be held within the buildings of the California Science Center in Exposition Park, just south of downtown Los Angeles.


Intel ISEF Affiliation

For 2019 the California Science & Engineering Fair is affiliated with the Intel International Science and Engineering Fair (ISEF). This affiliation has been made possible by the generous support of the Broadcom Foundation.

Students on approximately six projects will be named at the CSEF Awards Ceremony as ISEF finalists to compete in the international competition held this year in Phoenix, Arizona, from May 12 - 17. Owing to the tight window between CSEF and ISEF this year, all students named as ISEF finalists will need to be present at the Awards Ceremony on April 30 in order to facilitate immediate ISEF registration after the Awards Ceremony.


Research Review Process Revised

The documentation concerning adherence to government regulations has been revised and is now required for all projects. This change is a direct result of our ISEF affiliation, which requires certain types of research projects to receive pre-approval from a properly constituted Scientific Research Committee (SRC) or Institutional Review Board (IRB). In consequence, and used in parallel with ISEF documentation, CSEF has changed its own documentation concerning adherence to relevant government regulations. In place of the old Safety/Certification Form, required of only some projects, there is now a new Certification Form required of all projects not already covered by ISEF forms.

The required documentation will be provided by one and only one of the following:

  1. ISEF forms, or
  2. The new CSEF Research Certification form.

All students must submit either the ISEF forms or the CSEF form. No one is required to submit both. ISEF forms are required of all students wishing to be ISEF-eligible, while the CSEF form is required for everyone else. Note that there are several forms involved in the ISEF documentation. All students wishing to be ISEF-eligible must submit ISEF forms 1, 1A, and 1B. Additionally, depending upon the specific project, some or all of ISEF forms 1C, 2, 3, 4, 5A, 5B, 6A, and 6B may be required.

Submission of ISEF forms will not make any project automatically ISEF-eligible. However, failure to submit the appropriate ISEF forms will disqualify a project which otherwise could be eligible. Submitted ISEF forms require approval by the CSEF SRC in order to confer ISEF-eligibility.

As always, students should retain possession of the original form(s), whether from ISEF or CSEF, and include it(them) inside their research notebook as part of their project display at the Fair. Photocopies or scans of the originals must be submitted as part of the CSEF application process.


PROS Form Discontinued

The CSEF PROS form documenting “Professional Research Opportunity Support” for student research projects has been discontinued in favor of ISEF form 1C. With the 2019 revision of ISEF’s form 1C, there is no longer any important difference between the two. Therefore, in order to eliminate confusion between them, CSEF is eliminating the PROS form and will accept only ISEF's current (2019) form 1C to document suppport by professional research organizations.

This replacement of the PROS form by ISEF form 1C applies to all projects in both age divisions, Junior and Senior. Use of ISEF form 1C is in no way connected with any expectation of projects being ISEF-eligible.


Annual Update

Project Allocations for 2019

The allocations to affiliated fairs of the number of projects which may be sent to CSEF have been determined. Beginning in 1998, the number of projects which each affiliated fair is allowed to qualify to CSEF has been defined as an explicit limit set by CSEF. Based upon available space (which varies every year), determined needs across the entire State, and discussions with our affiliates, most notably all of those participating in recent Affiliated Fairs Conferences, here are the allocations for 2019. With the exception of the smallest affiliates, whose allocations are already at the minimum of 6, almost all affiliates have been assigned allocations which are smaller than in previous years. This is due to the fact that in 2019 the space available for project displays within the California Science Center is smaller than in previous years owing to temporary exhibits which will be on display in the Science Center during this year’s fair. Some of the spaces which have been used in recent years will likely not be available again in the future.


Broadcom MASTERS Competition

The California Science & Engineering Fair is affiliated with the Broadcom MASTERS (Math, Applied Science, Technology, and Engineering for Rising Stars) Competition for 2019.

As a result of this affiliation, all projects in the Junior Division which receive a category award of First or Second Place (and have not already been nominated to the Broadcom MASTERS by their local fair) will be qualified into, and receive entry packages for, the Broadcom MASTERS competition. Depending upon the number of such selected students who have already been qualified into the Broadcom MASTERS by our affiliated fairs, it may be possible for CSEF to qualify Third Place (and even Fourth Place) winners as well. Obviously, this will not be known until the Awards Ceremony.

The Broadcom MASTERS is a nationwide competition for students in the sixth, seventh, and eighth grades. From the total entrant pool, 300 Semifinalists will be selected, including 30 Finalists who win an all-expense paid trip to Washington, D.C. for themselves and one chaperon, where they will compete for awards and prizes, including the top award of $25,000. For further information on the competition itself see the Broadcom MASTERS web site.


Recent Changes (announced in previous years)

Application Fee Waiver (2018)

Students with documented financial hardships may apply for a waiver from the $45 CSEF Application Fee.

Associated with the 2018 increase in Application Fee, and in recognition of the difficulty this may cause some potential participants, the Application Fee will be waived for students with documented financial hardship. The conditions for this waiver, and the documentation required, are described on the Application Fee Form itself.


Single Awards Ceremony — Closed to the Public (2017)

There will be only a single Awards Ceremony for the Fair. This ceremony will be closed to the public.

For many years CSEF has held separate awards ceremonies for the Junior Division and Senior Division. Owing to space limitations the Junior Division Awards Ceremony at 4:00 pm was closed to the public, although the Senior Division Awards Ceremony at 5:30 pm was open to all. Each Junior Division participant was given one ticket at Registration for an accompanying guest to enter the earlier awards ceremony.

For 2017, in order to accommodate families, schools, and county groups with participants in both divisions, these two ceremonies will be merged into a single awards ceremony at 4:00 pm. Owing to space limitations, only participants and presenters will be allowed into the ceremony itself.

However, there will be auxiliary viewing locations elsewhere within the California Science Center. Each participant will be given one division-specific ticket at Registration to enable an accompanying guest to enter the corresponding viewing location. There are no tickets for sale to either location.

Only persons holding a ceremony viewing ticket will be admitted to these viewing locations.


Simplified Deadline (2017)

The deadline structure for applications was simplified in 2017. There is now only one deadline, the Submission Deadline. While applications are incomplete until the Application Fee has been paid (along with possibly other documentation depending upon the project), not sending the Application Fee within two days of the application’s Submission Deadline is no longer a reason for rejecting applications. Nevertheless, for qualified projects the Application Fee should still be sent immediately after submitting the application. Alternate projects should continue to wait for the acceptance decision and explicit instruction to send the Application Fee.

History: For many years there have been two deadlines which applications had to satisfy, a Submission Deadline and an Application Fee Deadline. The original motivation for the Application Fee Deadline was abuse by a small number of students who submitted applications to CSEF with no intention of participating, thereby precluding the participation of other students named as alternates. By requiring the Application Fee before announcing acceptances the frequency of such abuse was reduced.

However, given the desire by students and their families for earlier decisions on acceptance, especially those not within driving distance of Los Angeles and therefore needing to make special travel arrangements, CSEF has progressively reduced the gap from the application submission until an acceptance decision was announced. Now, each fair’s Decision Date, when acceptance decisions are announced, is only seven calendar days after its Submission Deadline. Consequently, there is no longer sufficient time for the Application Fee to be mailed, received, and processed before the Decision Date. In recognition of the fact that receipt of the Application Fee can no longer be a condition for acceptance, there is no longer an explicit Appplication Fee Deadline. Nevertheless, the Application Fee is still required of every participant before being allowed to register on site and set up the Project Display. Whether the Application Fee for each application has been received will continue to be published on the CSEF web site.

Clarification on Submission Deadline: Under normal circumstances an affiliate’s Submission Deadline is the date after which any application from a student from that affiliate will not be accepted. However, there are exceptions. More precisely, the Submission Deadline is the last date on which applications for qualified projects from an affiliate retain priority over its alternates. After the Submission Deadline if the total number of acceptable applications received from an affiliate is equal to or larger than that affiliate’s allocation, no further applications from that affiliate will be accepted. All on-time applications from qualified projects that meet the CSEF Eligibility Criteria will be accepted, along with on-time alternates in the priority order specified by the affiliated fair to the extent that doing so does not exceed the affiliate’s allocation. However, if the total number of applications has not filled the affilate’s allocation, then subsequent applications will still be accepted until the allocation has been filled or the Final Submission Deadline (which this year is April 4) on a first-come, first-served basis, without regard for whether the submitted project was named as a qualified or alternate project. Consequently, qualified projects submitted after the Submission Deadline may not be accepted if alternate projects submitted earlier have filled the allocation.

Clarification on Team Projects: Each member of a Team Project must submit his/her own application, along with its associated Application Fee. For purposes of determining when “the project” was submitted, CSEF will use the earliest application submission time by any member of the team. Team members submitting applications after the Submission Deadline will not be rejected simply owing to a late application if another member of the team has already submitted an application on time and the project is otherwise eligible for participation.

Earlier Rolling Acceptances (Changed in 2016)

Acceptances for students from fairs with early deadlines will receive notice earlier than before. Submission Deadlines for all of CSEF's affiliates are staggered across several weeks, often spanning March and April, with fairs whose Awards Ceremonies are held earliest having the earliest deadlines. Nevertheless, before 2009 all applicants received notice of acceptance (or not) at the same time, the Final Decision Date.

In an effort to allow families more time to make travel plans, beginning in 2009 acceptances were announced progressively over the course of the application period. Acceptances (or rejections) for applicants from each affiliate were announced 14 calendar days after the Submission Deadline for that affiliate, or the Final Decision Date, whichever came earlier.

Beginning in 2016 the Decision Date for each affiliate was changed to either seven (7) calendar days after the affiliate’s Submission Deadline, or the Final Decision Date, whichever comes first.


See also: Changes last year: 2018.

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Last updated: Thu Jan 24 13:05:36 PST 2019
California Science & Engineering Fair / Changes for 2019 / CSEF@usc.edu