Skip To Main Content Skip To Profile Details
Two high school boys hold a homemade rocket made from a Sprite bottle
Students with a knack for science, engineering and competition are able to showcase their talents in a variety of team and individual events as part of the Texas Science Olympiad, the state's premier annual science and technology showdown for middle and high school students hosted each year by Texas A&M University.

Nearly 1,000 Texas middle and high school students will put their science and engineering knowledge to the test this weekend in Aggieland as they battle for Lone Star State bragging rights in the  2022 Texas Science Olympiad (TSO), scheduled for April 22-23 at Texas A&M University.

For the 20th consecutive year, Texas A&M will play host to the blockbuster finale that features 60 teams from across the state — 30 in the middle school division and 30 in the high school division — in the ultimate battle of science- and engineering-related academic and at times even athletic wits.

Friday’s build/design-themed events, which are free and open to the public, will run from 9:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. and be held at the   Brazos County Expo Complex  in Bryan. Saturday’s laboratory and knowledge-based competitions, set for 8 a.m. to 2:50 p.m., are restricted to participants only and will take place on the Texas A&M campus. All events will conclude with a Saturday evening awards ceremony (6:30 p.m. for Division B, 7:30 p.m. for Division C) at Texas A&M’s Rudder Theater Complex.

The rigorous academic contest, which is part of a broader national competition that aims to improve the quality of science education in schools, covers a variety of topics spanning the gamut of science, engineering and technology. Individually and collectively, each challenge is designed to test students’ knowledge of a given subject through their combined use of problem-solving skills and teamwork.

Watch a recap video from a previous Texas Science Olympiad on YouTube:



Each competing school is permitted one team of 15 students who will compete in Division B (grades 6-9) or Division C (grades 9-12). During the course of the two-day competition, students will display their skills in a variety of ways, such as constructing longest-flying gliders, the most efficient boom and battery-powered cars, launching indoor bottle rockets, detecting diseases, and discerning potions and poisons.

“Science Olympiad is an incredible tool for teaching science and engineering,” said Dr. Nancy Magnussen, a member of the Texas A&M College of Science Educational Outreach and Women’s Programs Office and state director for the Texas Science Olympiad. “It’s a great opportunity for these students to not only showcase their knowledge of science in a fun, competitive environment, but also to work together as a team toward a common goal.

“Across Texas, this is a huge event that so many students look forward to each year. But what we, as well as the students and their teachers, love about it is that it allows participation by all types of students — those who are academically gifted as well as those who are master builders and craftsmen. They all get the chance to show off their knowledge and skills, because the emphasis is placed on active, hands-on group participation.”

In addition to local coordinators from across the Brazos Valley, nearly 200 Texas A&M and Blinn College faculty, staff and students will be on hand to set up and judge the competition’s 56 events, which feature 23 national as well as five Texas events per division. As in previous years, organizers and judges from NASA as well as business and industrial representatives from both the Houston and Austin communities also are volunteering their services and expertise.

First-through-fourth-place winners will be decided for each contest and subsequently recognized as part of Saturday’s official awards ceremony in Rudder. The schools from division with the lowest scores (two from middle, one from high school) will advance to the Science Olympiad National Tournament, to be held May 9-14 at the California Institute of Technology.

The Science Olympiad is a non-profit organization dedicated to improving the quality of K-12 science education, increasing student interest in science, and recognizing outstanding achievements in science education by both students and teachers. Michigan State University hosted the first annual Science Olympiad National Tournament in May 1985, with 17 states participating. Currently, more than 5,500 teams across all 50 states are involved in 400 tournaments hosted annually on college campuses like Texas A&M.

Find more information on this year’s Texas Science Olympiad, including event schedules for both divisions.

To learn more about the Science Olympiad organization, visit https://soinc.org/.

Across Texas, this is a huge event that so many students look forward to each year. But what we, as well as the students and their teachers, love about it is that it allows participation by all types of students — those who are academically gifted as well as those who are master builders and craftsmen. They all get the chance to show off their knowledge and skills, because the emphasis is placed on active, hands-on group participation.

Dr. Nancy Magnussen, Texas A&M Educational Outreach & Women's Programs Office