Today’s Spotlight uses an image, taken by Allegra Boverman, of MIT senior Arfa Aijazi.
MIT senior Arfa Aijazi might say that her path to the Institute started with the yeast‑powered fuel cell she made for a high‑school science fair — a project that led her to the Intel International Science and Engineering Fair. “The fact that I could model a natural phenomenon using things I found around the house was really exciting” Aijazi says.
Or maybe it started before that, when a routine frog dissection in ninth‑grade biology class took an unexpected turn, and Aijazi found out what a pregnant frog looks like on the inside. “You don’t always get what you expect,” Aijazi says. “That uncertainty and sense of discovery with science” fascinated her.
Read full article.
MIT senior Arfa Aijazi might say that her path to the Institute started with the yeast‑powered fuel cell she made for a high‑school science fair — a project that led her to the Intel International Science and Engineering Fair. “The fact that I could model a natural phenomenon using things I found around the house was really exciting” Aijazi says.
Or maybe it started before that, when a routine frog dissection in ninth‑grade biology class took an unexpected turn, and Aijazi found out what a pregnant frog looks like on the inside. “You don’t always get what you expect,” Aijazi says. “That uncertainty and sense of discovery with science” fascinated her.
Read full article.
