Logan primary school students have a Totally Wild time at Camp Koala

20 students from three primary schools within the Logan region were invited to represent their class and attend the inaugural Camp Koala. The camp was hosted on the grounds of the beautiful Aroona homestead in partnership with the Queensland Trust For Nature, thanks to a community grant awarded by the CommBank Foundation. The film crew from Totally Wild were there to capture all the excitement as students learned about the balance required in using land for both production of agricultural crops and conservation of threatened native species.

After a bush walk to collect camera trap data and a brief sighting of the elusive brush-tailed rock wallaby, we were treated to a demonstration of koala detection dogs working with their handlers. They demonstrated for the students how koalas can be tracked using their scats, which is a non-invasive way of collecting DNA to identify family groups, movements, habitat usage, infections, and so much more!

Early the next morning, before it got too hot and sunny, we planted 200 trees before our friends would have even walked through the school gates! The trees were a mix of species to match the biodiversity of the natural forest and will help provide more of the right environment for the threatened species that live in the area. The area for planting was chosen based on information gathered by the koala detection dogs that showed the koala needed more shelter and food sources in this area.

The whole episode is wonderful (click the image below to watch!) and you can see our Camp Koala segment from 4:22 to 8:02.

Did you know you can study fangaroos!?

Wonder of Science Young Science Ambassador for three years, and now full-time Program Officer with WoS, Dr Kaylene Butler, graduated with her PhD in vertebrate palaeontology in the mid-year ceremonies at The University of Queensland - congratulations! 

Dr Butler specialised in researching the ancient fanged kangaroo population of Australia, tracking their diet, competitors, boom and bust through fossil records to inform current conservation efforts in the hope of preventing extinction of current kangaroo populations. Her work is so cool that Totally Wild even filmed an episode featuring her!

You can read more about what inspired her to work in this area here and her advice for how to get into research here

 

Bits of rock and bone, 3D-printed models of ancient kangaroo skulls, and a range of fossils are the essentials in Dr Butler’s scicomm toolkit!

Bits of rock and bone, 3D-printed models of ancient kangaroo skulls, and a range of fossils are the essentials in Dr Butler’s scicomm toolkit!

2018 State Conference

Congratulations to all the teams who were selected from their local conferences throughout the year to represent their region at the Wonder of Science State Conference at The University of Queensland on November 30th, 2018. We're so glad you could join us to showcase your WoS STEM projects!

Please enjoy the 2018 State Conference highlights video and feel free to share it with your friends and family!

An extra special "WELL DONE!" to all those teams who presented such excellent STEM projects that they were awarded the title of 2018 State Champions:

Year 5

  • 1st place - Happy Valley State School, representing Mount Isa

  • 2nd place - Mansfield State School, representing Metro

  • 3rd place - Dalby South State School, representing Darling Downs South West

    Year 6

  • 1st place - Kimberley Park State School, representing Logan

  • 2nd place - Mansfield State School, representing Metro

  • 3rd place - Riverside Christian College, representing the North Coast

    Year 7

  • 1st place - St Mary’s College, Ipswich, representing the Lockyer Valley

  • 2nd place - Riverside Christian College, representing the North Coast

  • 3rd place - Shailer Park State School, representing Logan

    Year 8

  • 1st place - Roma State College, representing Darling Downs South West

  • 2nd place - Spinifex State College, representing Mount Isa

  • 3rd place - Marsden State High School, representing Logan

    Year 9

  • 1st place - Bundaberg State High School, representing the North Coast

  • 2nd place - Marsden State High School, representing Logan

  • 3rd place - St Mary's College Ipswich, representing the Lockyer Valley

Thank you to our wonderful partners, without whom we would not be able to reach as far and wide across our beautiful state: Arrow Energy, Glencore, Queensland University of Technology, Griffith University, The University of Queensland, the Australian Academy for Technology and Engineering, the Queensland Trust For Nature, Moreton Bay Environmental Education Centre, the Queensland Government and Queensland Office of the Chief Scientist.

Lockyer Regional Student Conference - 2018

Students from the Lockyer region gathered at the University of Queensland campus in Gatton to share their responses to the Wonder of Science challenge tasks and take part in fun workshops. They competed for the title of Regional Champion and an invitation to present to their peers from all the Queensland regions at the State Conference to be held in November at the University of Queensland St Lucia campus. 

The regional student conferences provide the opportunity for students to practise effective science communication, conveying the process and outcomes of their scientific inquiry project which builds higher order thinking skills and develops scientific understanding.

Well done to all the students from our participating schools, and particularly those teams selected to represent their class at the conference. Congratulations to the following student teams named regional champions who will join us at the State Conference in November:

Year 7 - St Mary's College, Ipswich
Year 8 - Rosewood State High School and Laidley State High School, tied 1st place
Year 9 - St Mary's College, Ipswich
Year 10 - Lockyer District State High School


Song: Everlasting [Top Shelf Sounds Release] 
Artists: Jansku Music provided by Top Shelf Sounds : https://goo.gl/18xxWt 

Young Science Ambassador, Ms Amy Chan, wins big in the Queensland Women in STEM Prizes

On the 24th of March, 2018, during the World Science Festival Brisbane, the winners of the Queensland Women in STEM Prizes were announced by the Minister for the Environment and Science Leeanne Enoch MP and Minister for Women Di Farmer MP. With over 10,000 views, Amy Chan was awarded the People's Choice award for her entry describing her research on sepsis and her motivation for continuing to raise the profile of women in STEM fields, titled "Mission Inflammation: Guarding against Collateral Damage in Infection" 

Leeanne Enoch MP, Ms Amy Chan YSA, and Di Farmer MP. Photo credit: @qldscience (Twitter)

Leeanne Enoch MP, Ms Amy Chan YSA, and Di Farmer MP. Photo credit: @qldscience (Twitter)

This is Amy's second year as a Young Science Ambassador with Wonder of Science, and says her involvement in the WoS program (featured in her video entry) provided her with the confidence to apply for the award:

 
I’d like to thank Wonder of Science for giving me the confidence to apply for the Queensland Women in STEM award. WoS gave me a lot of science communication practice and now I feel comfortable talking to other people about my PhD (I used to avoid doing this at all costs!)
 

Congratulations to Amy and to the four other Young Science Ambassadors who entered the 2018 Queensland Women in STEM Prizes. Although voting has now closed, you can still view their entries and read about their amazing research by clicking their names below: 

Emily Furlong | "Understanding the weapons assembly factory in bacteria" 

Pingping Han | "Boning up: New treatment for osteoporosis"

Claudia Stocks | "Think zinc! Discovering new ways to fight infectious disease"

Nicole Stormon | "Solving oral health inequalities through research"