Not afraid to tackle tough issues at Eighth-grade Expo

SALISBURY — Eighth-graders at Salisbury Central School showed off their research projects at the Eighth-grade Expo Thursday, May 27.

Students began picking their topics and started their research in late February. The Expo projects are an interdisciplinary effort between the social studies and science departments.

Deanna Silvernail took on pesticides, explaining the dangers of many pesticides and offering alternatives. As part of her research she got out of the academic realm and interviewed an actual farmer.

Corey Marshall, whose mother has a prosthetic leg, broached a potentially sensitive subject — are athletes with artifical limbs disabled, or too-abled? He found the case of a South African sprinter who is a “bilateral amputee.� He runs incredibly quickly, yet international track and field officials believe his prosthetics give him an edge (he doesn’t need as much oxygen as a standard bilateral nonamputee).

Corey concluded that  athletes with prosthetics deserve the chance to compete with their counterparts.

Bilan DeDonato took a look at the illegal wildlife trade — primarily elephants and tigers, in demand for ivory (elephants) and for various body parts thought useful for folk medicine (tigers).

She said she was surprised at the relative laxity of punishments for traffickers.

“One Chinese trader was caught and they suspended his license,� she said. “So he just put it all in his wife’s name.�

Cristian Umana, who studied the diamond mining business in Africa, conceded he went into the project with a preconceived idea, largely derived from popular culture, that the business is unsavory at best.

But after completing his project — which is studiously balanced, giving pros and cons of diamond mining and features his opinion (labeled, in case anybody misses the point, “My Opinionâ€�) —  he said he had reached a different conclusion.

On balance, he said, diamond mining provides badly needed economic activity in Africa.

“I was surprised. I had thought it was all pretty negative stuff — blood diamonds, and all that.�

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