During a seminar for science students at the Leo Buck Education Center,
Dr. Rafi Biar, director of the Rambam Hospital, gave a lecture on innovations in medicine, and study scholarships, named after the late Itai Silbschmidt, were distributed to outstanding students in the sciences.
The widow of the late Itai Zilberschmidt, who collapsed and died about three years ago, suddenly during a basketball game, presented the awards to students from the upper division in Leo Buck, who excel in science.
The Itai Silberschmidt scholarship distribution ceremony is dedicated to encouraging the learning of scientific subjects at Leo Buck High School as part of a science seminar. During the seminar, science students who submitted selected papers. their research work in the fields of sciences or a combination of sciences and arts.
Prizes and study scholarships on behalf of the family were awarded to science students for the following works: 1. Creating an artificial arch in the garden and photographing it 2. For researching the nucleation of a solid in a carbonated liquid 3. Photographic work that examines reflections and research work in biology that studied the effect of caffeine on species of moths.
The guest of the conference, apart from the family members and Itai Silberschmidt's widow, was Professor Rafi Biar. Biar lectured the students about medical innovations and in particular about the latest technologies in the field of cinators.
Danny Fassler and Rev. Rafi Biar
Danny Fessler CEO of the Leo Buck Education Center: "The distribution of the Itai Silberschmidt scholarships is an event that provides a platform for the creative activity and curiosity of the science students at the school. We at Leo Buck encourage the study of science in ways that will speak to the students. It is worth noting that about a third of the 11th and 12th students choose subjects in physics as an advanced subject. And very high percentages of 11th and 12th grade students choose chemistry and biology."