Results of WYSE Academic Challenge Sectional at McKendree University
Note: Team photos
(LEBANON, Ill., April 3, 2017) — Students from 37 southwestern Illinois high schools
competed in the Illinois Sectional Tournament of the 2017 Worldwide Youth in Science
and Engineering (WYSE) Academic Challenge, held on March 13 at McKendree University.
The top school teams in each of four divisions, based on enrollment size, were Gibault
Catholic High School, Wesclin High School, Waterloo High School and O’Fallon Township
High School.
Schools that qualified for team advancement are Gibault Catholic, Okawville-West Washington
County, Wesclin, Freeburg, Waterloo, Triad, O’Fallon and Belleville West. Seventy-six
or more students will advance to the state finals competition in Champaign, Ill.,
from April 17-20.
Approximately 350 participants came from Belleville West, Bond County (Greenville),
Calhoun, Carlinville, Carlyle, Central Community (Breese), Centralia, Chester, Christ
Our Rock Lutheran (Centralia), Christ Our Saviour Lutheran (Evansville), Collinsville,
Columbia, Dupo, East Alton-Wood River, Edwardsville, Freeburg, Gibault Catholic (Waterloo),
Governor French Academy (Belleville), Highland, Jersey Community, Lebanon, Marquette
Catholic (Alton), Mascoutah, Mater Dei Catholic (Breese), Metro-East Lutheran (Edwardsville),
Mulberry Grove, Nashville, O’Fallon, Okawville-West Washington County, Patoka, Red
Bud, Salem, South Central (Farina), Triad, Vandalia, Waterloo and Wesclin.
The Academic Challenge tests high school students in seven subjects. Competing individually
and on school teams, students are tested on biology, chemistry, computer science,
engineering graphics, English, math and physics. Test material is drawn from senior
high school and freshman-level college curricula and is written by college and university
faculty. Exams of increasing levels of difficulty are given at the regional, sectional
and state finals.
This is the 14th year that McKendree University has hosted the competition. Dr. C.J. Dulaney, assistance
professor of computing, organized the event on campus this year.
WYSE’s purpose is to advance excellence in science and mathematics and to promote
careers in engineering and the sciences. McKendree-bound seniors who attend one of
the university’s scholarship events and place in the top three in their school’s division
at the WYSE Academic Challenge are eligible for academic scholarships.
-McK-