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Obama: Future Depends on Science, Math Education

WASHINGTON — A device to discourage texting while driving. A self-powered hydroelectric water purification device. A test of whether foam really is the best material to pad the inside of a safety helmet.

These projects weren’t put together by some of the country’s best scientists but were assembled by up-and-comers who won a range of science, technology, engineering and math competitions. They brought their projects to a science fair at the White House on Monday.

President Barack Obama reveled in it. He spent nearly an hour viewing 11 science projects on display in the State Dining Room, ranging from cancer therapies to solar-power cars, water purification systems and robotic wheelchairs. And he intensely questioned the presenters.

“It’s hard to describe just how impressive these young people are,” Obama, who is emphasizing math and science education, said afterward at a reception. Their work “is a testament to the potential that awaits when we inspire young people to take part in the scientific enterprise.”

Obama, who shows a personal fascination with science, said these victories often go unnoticed.

“You know, when you win first place at a science fair, nobody’s rushing the field or dumping Gatorade over your head,” said Obama, who has welcomed many championship professional and college athletic teams to the White House.

“But in many ways, our future depends on what happens in those contests, what happens when a young person is engaged in conducting an experiment or writing a piece of software or solving a hard math problem or designing a new gadget,” he said.

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