The inaugural , held on the National Mall in Washington, D.C. on October 23 and 24, attracted around half a million attendees who interacted with 1,500 exhibitions, including four booths hosted by Dartmouth faculty, postdoctoral researchers, and graduate students.
The festival aimed to 鈥渞e-invigorate the interest of our nation鈥檚 youth in science, technology, engineering and math (STEM) by producing and presenting the most compelling, exciting, educational and entertaining science gatherings in the United States.鈥

Mary Albert, professor of engineering, discusses ice cores and climate change with festival attendees. (photo courtesy Professor of Computer Science David Kotz 鈥86)
Led by faculty members from , , , and , Dartmouth鈥檚 festival teams introduced hundreds of curious youth and their families to interactive activities exploring supernovae, polar ice caps, glaciology, molecular self-assembly and DNA, and biological rhythms.
鈥淚t was great to see so many citizens at the festival who were eager to hold an actual ice core from Greenland, and learn about the clues to past climate that have been discovered in the Greenland and Antarctic ice sheets,鈥 says , professor of engineering.

Justin Foy, chemistry graduate student, and Amorette Barber, postdoctoral researcher in chemistry, present a model of DNA. (photo courtesy Professor of Computer Science David Kotz 鈥86)
Amorette Barber, a postdoctoral researcher in biology, says 鈥淚t was a really challenging but also rewarding experience to explain science to all different types of people, from young kids and parents without much biology background, to middle and high school students studying science in school, to college students majoring in biology.鈥 But, she notes, 鈥渞egardless of the amount of background information the visitors had, they all seemed really excited to learn more about science.鈥
鈥淚t was a fantastic event,鈥 noted Nancy Serrell, . 鈥淭he festival was a great opportunity for our graduate students and young faculty to communicate about their science beyond the confines of Dartmouth and the scientific community.鈥
As preparation the teams previously hosted previews of their exhibitions for the Upper Valley community in early September.