Glossary
EISEF definitions of words and abbreviations
Adult Roles
Students aren't permitted to experiment alone — they must have adult supervision. In some cases, several different adults (or groups of them) must supervise a student’s science fair project. These are the different Adult Roles; each has its own entry in this glossary.
Adult Sponsor
Designated Supervisor
Qualified Scientist
Institutional Review Board (IRB)
Scientific Review Committee (SRC)
For a complete discussion of Adult Roles in a science fair project, see Roles and Responsibilities of Students & Adults on the ISEF web site.
Adult Sponsor
An Adult Role in the student’s project. Every student project must have an Adult Sponsor. An Adult Sponsor may be a teacher, parent, university professor, or scientist in whose lab the student is working. This individual must have a solid scientific background and should have close contact with the student during the course of the project. The Adult Sponsor is ultimately responsible not only for the health and safety of the student conducting the research, but also for the humans or animals used as subjects. The Adult Sponsor is responsible for ensuring the student’s research is eligible to attend EISEF.
Designated Supervisor
An Adult Role in the student’s project. The Designated Supervisor is an adult who is directly responsible for overseeing student experimentation. The Designated Supervisor need not have an advanced degree, but should be trained in the student’s area of research. The Adult Sponsor may act as the Designated Supervisor. If a student is experimenting with live vertebrates and the animals are in a situation where their behavior or habitat is influenced by humans, the Designated Supervisor must be knowledgeable about the humane care and handling of the animals.
Qualified Scientist
An Adult Role in the student’s project. The Qualified Scientist should have an earned doctoral or professional degree in the biological or medical sciences as it relates to the student’s area of research. A master’s degree with equivalent experience or expertise in the student’s area of research is acceptable when approved by an SRC. The Adult Sponsor, if qualified, may act as the Qualified Scientist. A student may work with a Qualified Scientist in another city or state, but must work locally with a Designated Supervisor who has been trained in the techniques the student will use.
Institutional Review Board (IRB)
A committee within each school that approves the safety of projects with human subjects. Students must get their IRB’s approval before starting any experiment (including surveys) on humans. The IRB must include:
a science teacher
a school administrator (preferably a principal or vice principal)
someone knowledgeable and capable of evaluating the physical and/or psychological risk involved in a given study:
medical doctor
physician’s assistant
registered nurse
psychiatrist
psychologist
licensed social worker
The Adult Sponsor, Qualified Scientist, and Designated Supervisor cannot serve on the school IRB for their student’s project.
Scientific Review Committee (SRC)
A committee within a school’s district that approves projects needing special approvals. In some cases, students need to get SRC approval before doing any experimentation. The SRC must include:
a biomedical scientist (Ph.D., M.D., D.V.M., D.D.S., or D.O.)
a science teacher
at least one other member
The Adult Sponsor, Qualified Scientist, and Designated Supervisor cannot serve on the SRC for their student’s project.
Division
A grouping of exhibits by age group, project type, and research category. The exhibits in a division are judged against each other for the EISEF Class Awards. The divisions are:
Senior biological. Individual and team exhibits.
Senior physical. Individual and team exhibits.
Junior biological. Individual exhibits only.
Junior physical. Individual exhibits only.
Junior teams. Team exhibits only; they can be either biological or physical science.
Age Group (Senior vs Junior)
Seniors, for students in 9th through 12th grade. Senior Champions will receive a trip to the ISEF in Columbus, Ohio.
Juniors, for students in 6th through 8th grade.
Project Type (individual vs. team)
Individuals: A single student does the experiment and exhibits the results at the Fair.
Teams: Two or three students cooperate to do the experiment and exhibit the results at the Fair. All the team members must be in the same age group (senior vs. junior).
Research Category (biological vs. physical)
For 2025, ISEF has 22 research categories (see the ISEF Category Descriptions). EISEF combines these into just two, Biological and Physical. Here’s how the categories line up between EISEF and ISEF:
Registration & Check-in
Register/registration
A student registers a project with the Fair by visiting the Project Registration; their adult sponsor registers, and then the student does; then they upload their signed project paperwork to EISEF using their student login. This lets us know that they are coming to the Fair.
Check-in
The student checks in at the Student Check-in table on Fair Day morning 8:00 AM–8:55 AM. Here they tell us that they’ve arrived, and we tell them where to set up their exhibit. In 2024, we introduced an online check-in process. This will be our primary check-in process moving forward, but there will still be a check-in table on fair day for any questions.
Registration Status
After we receive a project registration, we post the student’s name and the project information on the Status of Projects page. The page also shows the status of the registration:
Pending: We received the student’s online project registration; now we’re waiting to receive the project’s signed paperwork. Once we receive the paperwork, we’ll the change the project’s status to Accepted.
Accepted: Everything about the project is in order; we’ll be ready for the student at Student Check-in in Lindale Mall at 8:00 AM on March 15, 2025.
Disqualified: The student broke the rules and won’t be allowed to check in or exhibit at the Fair.
Dropped: The student registered, then decided not to attend this year’s EISEF.
Science Fairs
International Science and Engineering Fair (ISEF)
ISEF is the world’s largest international pre-college science competition; each year it provides a forum for more than 1,500 high school students from over 50 countries to showcase their independent research. The ISEF is the premiere science competition in the world for students in grades 9–12. EISEF is affiliated with the International Science and Engineering Fair (ISEF), an activity of the Society for Science & the Public (SSP). EISEF’s ID is USIA01. For more information, follow one of these ISEF Web links:
Eastern Iowa Science and Engineering Fair (EISEF)
EISEF is an ISEF-affiliated regional science fair that takes place each year in March, usually on the third Saturday, in Lindale Mall in Cedar Rapids, Iowa. Students from anywhere in eastern Iowa are eligible to exhibit here.
Director
EISEF’s Director takes care of the fair from a this-year-only perspective. He fills out paperwork to ISEF for this year’s fair, answers teacher questions, sets goals, and so on. He’s the point of contact for ISEF, the national sponsored awards, and EISEF. He’s concerned with the fair as a specific activity.
President
EISEF’s President runs the fair as a generic organization. The president could be running almost any sort of event: a science fair, an art fair, a spelling bee, etc. No matter what the purpose of the group is, it still needs funding (for this year and next year and years to come), members, participants, publicity, organization, etc. The president keeps track of each of our committees, guides the discussions during our meetings, and answers some questions related to the organization. But the president refers questions specific to this year's fair to the Director.
State Science and Technology Fair of Iowa (SSTFI)
Iowa’s ISEF-affiliated state science fair. It takes place in Ames, Iowa, on the Iowa State University (ISU) campus, usually the last Friday and Saturday of March. This year’s SSTFI is March 27–28, 2025. For more information visit the SSTFI web site.
Western Iowa Science and Engineering Fair (WISEF)
The ISEF-affiliated regional fair that covers the schools and students in Iowa west of EISEF’s territory. It takes place in Fort Dodge; this year’s WISEF is scheduled for March 23, 2024. For more information, visit the WISEF Facebook Page.
Awards
EISEF Class Awards
On the morning of Fair Day, judges will interview all the students so we can rank their exhibits. In each division, EISEF presents the following awards:
Class I, to the best 10% of the exhibits. These students each receive a cash prize and a blue ribbon with a medallion.
Class II, to the next 10%. These students each receive a red ribbon with a medallion.
Honorable Mention, to the next 10%. These students each receive a white ribbon with a medallion.
We select the best Junior exhibits as Junior Champions.
During the afternoon, we re-interview our top seniors to select our Senior Champions, who will represent us at the ISEF.
Sponsored Awards
In parallel to the judging for the EISEF awards, many other organizations — scientific, engineering, or educational — will also interview students to find ones who merit their own Sponsored Awards. The Sponsoring Organizations provide awards directly to individual students in the form of cash, certificates, or other non-monetary recognition. Past sponsors have included:
colleges and universities
non-profit academic and professional groups
companies and government agencies
individuals who want to inspire excellence among eastern Iowa’s students
Award Sponsors
The Award Sponsor determines the criteria for presenting the award: which students should receive the award, and what they should do to merit it. The page For Award Sponsors describes how to sponsor an award.
V. O. Hasek
The legendary founder of EISEF. The EISEF senior champions each receive a plaque for their school bearing this person’s name.