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Search resuls for: "Maria Estrada"


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Read previewThis as-told-to essay is based on a conversation with Maria Estrada, 51, who is a plant-science lecturer at Fresno State and the mother of two teenagers. But when they were in middle school and younger, we had a Cinderella thing: At midnight, all the wifi would disappear. How we locked their devices at midnightLeft to right: Maria Estrada, her kids Pauline and John, and her husband Dexter, after the kids won first place in the plant science category at a science competition. Maria EstradaMy husband, Dexter, used two different apps to lock our kids' devices so they couldn't stay up late texting, watching videos, and playing games. Our kids have both excelledI don't do anything to restrict my kids' screen time anymore.
Persons: , Maria Estrada, It's, I've, Estrada, Pauline, John, Dexter, John Benedict Estrada, he'd, Pauline Estrada, Maria Estrada Pauline, they've Organizations: Service, Fresno State, Business, YouTube, Microsoft, Safety, University of California Locations: Berkeley
It helped him, especially in his science fair projects. They both used their coding skills later when they developed AI models for their science fair projects. But video games might have taken my son a step further. John and Pauline did their next science fair project together, expanding on the concept with tomato plants and a rover. John Benedict Estrada and Pauline Estrada stand in front of their science fair project at Regeneron ISEF.
Persons: , Maria Estrada, It's, they've, John, Mario, Pauline, Dexter, Estrada's, Gordon E, Moore, John Benedict Estrada, Pauline Estrada, ISEF Organizations: Service, Fresno State, Business, Nintendo, PlayStation, Regeneron, Science, Engineering, University of California Locations: ISEF, Berkeley
They had all won regional, state, or national science fairs and finally made it to the Regeneron International Science and Engineering Fair (ISEF) to compete for $9 million in prizes. It's nothing to do with science," Motwani said. Morgan McFall-JohnsenThe moms said their children were motivated to muscle through when their science fair projects got tough, simply because they liked doing it. Advertisement"Our lives actually revolve around science fair because this is something that my kids enjoy doing," Estrada said. Otherwise, he would work on science fair projects until 2 a.m., she said.
Persons: , Morgan McFall, Johnsen, That's, Smriti Motwani, Divij, Ayush Garg, Divij Motwani, Johnsen Maria Estrada, Pauline, John, Estrada didn't, Estrada, he's, Motwani, Alexa Groff, Taylor, Groff, Maddux Alexander Springer, Pauline Victoria Estrada, Maria Estrada Estrada, It's, she's, Dexter Organizations: Service, Los Angeles Convention Center, Regeneron, Science, Engineering, Business, Fresno State, BI, ISEF, Oahu Locations: Los Angeles, Iowa, Fresno
"But they also feel the pressure of wanting to win and the pressure of going to college," she told Business Insider last week. The biggest mistake that parents with ambitious, curious kids can make is adding to that pressure, she said. Stepping back and letting the kids do the workGrace Sun holds an OECT device that helped her win the ISEF science fair. "We never pressure them," Maria Estrada, whose two children have both competed and won awards at ISEF, told Business Insider. Sun told Business Insider she had to miss hours of school to work in a university lab for her project.
Persons: , Rhodes, it's, Ajmera, Gen Z, Grace Sun, Chris Ayers, Maria Estrada, Estrada, she's, Alexa Groff, Taylor, Groff, ISEF, Maddux Alexander Springer, Peggy Scripps, Krish Pai, Michelle Wei, George D Organizations: Service, Science, Engineering, MacArthur Foundation, Business, Society for Science, ISEF, Communication, Sun Locations: Hawaii, California, Kildare, Ireland, Shanghai, China, Los Angeles
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