Science Day Breaks Records for Volunteers

The 11th annual event brought together 180 volunteers, the most in the program’s history.

Far right, graduate student Olivia Smith (ecology, evolution, environment, and society) volunteering at the “finding friends and food” activity station.

Science Day at Dartmouth returned April 25 for its 11th year. Kids pressed strawberries to extract DNA, grew candy crystals, built bristle bots out of toothbrush heads, and watched a demonstration of quantum sensing using actual diamonds. For five hours, the Life Sciences Center at Dartmouth became a science fair without the competition — just curiosity.

The event drew 605 attendees and roughly 180 volunteers, the highest volunteer count in the event’s history.

Graduate students organized and ran the day entirely with support from the Guarini School and a group of local and national sponsors. The program spanned more than a dozen disciplines, including biochemistry, microbiology, earth science, computer science, physics and astronomy, ecology, and psychology, with activities calibrated for kids from first grade through high school.

Far left, graduate student Seamus Jude (chemistry) demonstrating the science of fireworks.

High schoolers had their own track, run by Semillas to Science, a graduate-student-led organization that mentors underrepresented and first-generation students. A college application Q&A and a graduate student research poster session gave older attendees a direct line to researchers working in fields from immunology to energy systems.

Partner organizations Dartmouth NEXT, the New Hampshire Academy of Science, and SACNAS at Dartmouth also hosted stations, connecting kids to STEM mentorship resources beyond campus.

The 180 volunteers came from across Dartmouth: graduate students, postdocs, undergraduates, faculty, and staff, representing more than a decade of community investment in making science accessible to the Upper Valley.

See more photos on Flickr.

Event Sponsors:

The Guarini School of Graduate and Advanced Studies
Bio X Cell
American Society for Cell Biology (ASCB)
Dartmouth NEXT
Insmed
Celdara Medical
Boca Soca Mexican Grill
Lou’s Restaurant and Bakery

By Meghan Wicks
Meghan Wicks Communications Specialist