History | Science Olympiad (original) (raw)

The journey to take Science Olympiad to the national level began when Dr. Gerard J. Putz, Regional Science Consultant for Macomb County Intermediate School District in Michigan, invited John C. "Jack" Cairns, State Science Supervisor for Delaware Department of Instruction, to share the Science Olympiad program with Macomb County educators on March 29, 1982. The invitation was prompted by an article on the Delaware Science Olympiad (

The Science Teacher

, December 1977) written by Douglas Macbeth, past Delaware State Science Supervisor, that was brought to Dr. Putz's attention by Michigan Science Teachers Association President David Larwa. The Delaware Science Olympiad was patterned after similar events in Pennsylvania and North Carolina. After two successful workshops at the Macomb Intermediate School District (March 1982) and the Edsel and Eleanor Ford Estate (January 1983), science education leaders in Southeastern Michigan held two very successful tournaments at Lawrence Institute of Technology (April 1983) and Oakland University (May 1984).

These two tournaments were so well-received that Dr. Putz convinced Mr. Cairns that they should share the program with the rest of the nation. The Science Olympiad program was presented to the Council of State Science Supervisors at the National Science Teachers Association (NSTA) Conference in Boston in 1984 and sponsors were solicited from the conference exhibitors. Dr. Putz's experience with the Army (Lt. Col., Air Defense Artillery) and the understanding of its continued need for a high-tech modern workforce led him to the Army's booth. After much discussion, the Army decided to sponsor a National Leadership Seminar to determine the level of interest before they committed to sponsoring the first Science Olympiad National Tournament. Leaders from all 50 states and Puerto Rico were invited to this first seminar at the St. Clair Inn in Michigan in the summer of 1984. Event supervisors, coaches and students so impressed the United States Army Recruiting Command (USAREC) executives and the N.W. Ayer advertising agency that the Army decided to sponsor Science Olympiad's national founding. Ms. Sharon Putz was brought on as the Executive Administrator of Science Olympiad, and the first annual Science Olympiad National Tournament was hosted by Michigan State University in May 1985 with 18 states participating. Nearly 8,000 secondary school teams from 50 states participate now, with an additional 10,000 or more elementary schools holding Science Olympiad tournaments or hands-on events. Many milestones have been reached over the past four decades, and we look forward to the 40th Anniversary Season in 2024!

Science Olympiad National Tournaments

Year Institution Tournament Site Coordinators
1985 Michigan State University Dr. Harold Stonehouse
1986 Michigan State University Dr. Harold Stonehouse
1987 Ohio State University Linda Roberts
1988 Delaware State University Dr. William Macintosh
1989 University of Colorado, Boulder Sue Brandon & Dan Michaels
1990 Clarion University Sue Zamzow
1991 Penn Valley Community College Charles Gosselin
1992 Auburn University Dr. Marlin Simon & Dr. W.D. Perry
1993 University of So. Colorado, Pueblo Dr. Harold McConnell & John Reinert
1994 University of Arizona, Tucson Mary Lou Rankin & Gil McLaughlin
1995 Indiana University Lisa Townsend & Tina Gilliland
1996 Georgia Institute of Technology Dr. Milton Stombler & Ray Vito
1997 North Carolina State University Phil Dail
1998 Grand Valley State University Mary Ann Sheline, Sandi Bacon & G. Eacker
1999 Chicago Museums & Univ. of Chicago Brent Williamson & Museum & University Host Presidents
2000 Eastern Washington Univ., Spokane Jean Cavanaugh & Heather McKean
2001 Univ. of Colorado, Colorado Springs Dr. Dan Dandapani & Linder Winter
2002 University of Delaware, Newark Lyn Newsom, Peggy Vavalla & Fred Siegel
2003 Ohio State University, Columbus Sarah Sieling, CeAnn Chalker & Tim Taylor
2004 Juniata College, Huntingdon, PA Dr. Ron Pauline
2005 University of Illinois, Urbana, IL Howard Guenther & Kris Campbell
2006 Indiana University, Bloomington, IN Tina Gilliland
2007 Wichita State University, Wichita, KS Greg Novacek & Harry Gregory
2008 The George Washington University, Washington, DC Kathy Melvin, Robert Snyder & Fred Siegel
2009 Augusta State University, Augusta, GA Dr. Bill Wellnitz
2010 University of Illinois, Urbana, IL Howard Guenther & Joe Simmons
2011 University of Wisconsin, Madison, WI Van Valaskey & Gary Graper
2012 University of Central Florida, Orlando, FL Mike McKee & Dr. Sam Richie
2013 Wright State University, Dayton, OH CeAnn Chalker & Terri Mileo
2014 University of Central Florida, Orlando, FL Mike McKee & Dr. Sam Richie
2015 University of Nebraska, Lincoln, NE Dr. Jon Pedersen & Jim Woodland
2016 University of Wisconsin, Stout, Menomonie, WI Dr. Forrest Schultz
2017 Wright State University, Dayton, OH CeAnn Chalker
2018 Colorado State University, Ft. Collins, CO Dr. Steve Lovaas
2019 Cornell University, Ithaca, NY Jamie Cucinotta & Savvas Papadopoulos
2020 North Carolina State University, Raleigh, NC Kim Gervase
2021 Arizona State University, Tempe, AZ Reina Gomez
2022 Caltech, Pasadena, CA Dr. Peter Hung
2023 Wichita State University Jill Fisher & Jill Maroo
2024 Michigan State University Rob Halgren & Paul Voydanoff