PEA Quiz Team put to the test during 2008-09 school year
Seacoastonline.com

PEA Students Examine 5,000-Year-Old Glacier Sample
Seacoastonline.com

Jeanette Wat '09 Named Semifinalist in Intel Science Talent Search 2009
Intel

Jeanette Wat '09 Named Semifinalist in 2008-09 Siemens Competition in Math, Science & Technology
Siemens

Exeter Enhances Computer Science Curriculum with Personal Robots Awarded by IPRE
Business Wire


Academy Students Contend for Finals in 2009 National Biology Olympiad | First-time biology competitors aiming for positions on national and Olympiad teams

Academy Captures First Place in Regional Computer Programming Contest | Exeter's Two-Member Team Beats 24 Teams in Fourth-Annual New England Contest

Exeter Enhances Computer Science Curriculum with Personal Robots Awarded by IPRE |

One of only a few high schools selected for excellence in introductory computer science programs

PEA Senior Named Semifinalist in 2007-08 Siemens Math, Science and Technology Competition | One of only 294 students selected from across the country

Exeter's Grainger Observatory Director Discusses the Exeter Astronomy Conference | Science teacher hosts first Exeter Astronomy Conference at PEA

Intel Talent Search Spurs Senior’s Computer Science Career | Senior chosen as finalist in this year's Intel Talent Search


Lion's Eye Favorite: Students Learn About the Environment from 5,000-Year-Old Ice Sample | Ice expert from UNH talks about scientific research and ice chemistry

Lion's Eye Favorite: Technology and Harkness – a Fruitful Collaboration | Tablet PCs support the Harkness method in science classrooms

Lion's Eye Favorite: Students Travel to Kitt Peak for Andromeda Research | Three seniors awarded telescope time at famed observatory for research proposal

"Science Center Helps Students Take Center Stage" from The Exeter Bulletin, Summer 2007 | Forty students took part in top national and international science competitions in 2006-2007

Lion's Eye Favorite: Bringing Harkness to Peru | Biology field course to the Peruvian Amazon filled with adventure and learning

Talking Climate Change with Tim Wirth '57 (excerpt from The Exeter Bulletin, Spring 2007) | Wirth addresses global issues from energy to economics

Rare blue lobster caught by Exeter student | Lobster is used in the biology curriculum for molting experiments



Science

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The Science Department’s primary mission is to provide for all students a foundation of excellence in the study of science. Whether as scientists or as scientifically literate citizens, Exonians must be well-prepared to enter a world of increasing social and technological complexity. In order to assist students in reaching this goal, the science curriculum is designed to offer students a variety of opportunities to engage with the world around them—in the classroom, in the laboratory, and in field work.

Hands-on learning, both collaborative and individual, is at the heart of our course of instruction. The department considers the laboratory and the field to be its Harkness table, and students will have extensive practical experience. Therefore, classrooms in the Phelps Science Center and in the Grainger Observatory include both laboratory and discussion space. The department has integrated technology into the curriculum in a variety of guises, all designed to place the tools for discovery directly into the hands of the students.

The Science Department believes that successful scientific inquiry requires the integration of observational ability, quantitative skills, and analytical thinking; in all courses, students will be challenged to reason creatively and to think critically.

In keeping with the program broadly outlined above, the Phillips Exeter Academy Science Department strongly encourages students to take all three basic courses—biology, chemistry and physics—as a minimal preparation for college.