🎓 Thesis and Launch: Specialization, Publication and Leadership
An annual plan of 8 missions for twelfth grade, focused on the defense of a research thesis, the launching of startups and ethical mastery.
Main Objective of the Plan
To foster intellectual independence and specialization in twelfth grade students by guiding them through a year-long thesis project from conception to public defense or product launch.
STEM Disciplines and Skills
Science: Computational neuroscience, signal processing (EEG/fMRI), statistics (advanced).
Technology: Programming (Python: MNE-Python, SciPy, Pandas), BCI hardware (OpenBCI - conceptual).
Engineering: Software engineering (real-time data analysis), design of experiments.
Mathematics: Fourier transform, linear algebra (principal component analysis - PCA).
Critical Thinking: What is «mental privacy»? Analyze the ethical risks of BCI.
Collaboration: «Peer review» of another team's experimental design.
Hands-on activities
- EEG Data Analysis (Python): Use Python (MNE-Python) to load, filter and analyze a public EEG dataset. Identify P300 patterns or alpha/beta rhythms.
- BCI Experimental Design: Design a complete experimental protocol for a non-invasive BCI (e.g. controlling a drone with thought), including control group and statistical analysis.
- Discussion: «Neuro-Enhancement» (Enhancement): Debate the ethics of using BCI not to cure, but to «improve» cognition (memory, concentration) in healthy people.
Formative Evaluation
- Colab notebook with functional EEG analysis.
- Experimental design proposal (rubric).
- Argumentative essay on «neuro-improvement».
Integration of Ethical Values
Mental Privacy: Who owns your thoughts if a BCI can read them?
Agency and Authenticity: If a BCI «improves» you, are you still «you»?
Equity: The gap between the «neuro-enhanced» and the non-enhanced.
STEM Disciplines and Skills
Science: Environmental economics, political science, data science (complex systems modeling).
Technology: Agent-based modeling (NetLogo), GIS (QGIS, Google Earth Engine).
Engineering: Systems engineering (carbon market design), financial engineering (carbon credits).
Mathematics: Game theory (global prisoner's dilemma), optimization.
Systemic Thinking: Analyze the «Tragedy of the Commons» on a global scale and why negotiations (COP) fail.
Data Literacy: Analyze the real price of carbon and its impact on emissions.
Hands-on activities
- Cap and Trade (NetLogo) simulation: Use NetLogo to model a carbon market. What initial price and cap will achieve emission reductions without bankrupting the industry?
- Carbon Credits Audit (GIS): Using Google Earth Engine to analyze a reforestation project (selling carbon credits): Is it real? Is it permanent? (Verification).
- Negotiation Simulation (COP): Assign roles (US, China, EU, India, Brazil, Tuvalu) and negotiate a climate treaty. Use a simulator (e.g. C-ROADS) to see the impact of their pledges.
Formative Evaluation
- NetLogo lab report (policy analysis).
- Carbon credit GIS audit report.
- Participation (rubric) and results of the COP simulation.
Integration of Ethical Values
Climate Justice: Who should pay for the historical carbon emitted by rich nations?
«Carbon Colonialism: Is it ethical for rich countries to pay poor countries for «not developing» (conserving forests) in exchange for bonuses?
STEM Disciplines and Skills
Science: Data science (time series, machine learning for prediction).
Technology: Programming (Python: Pandas, NumPy, QuantLib, Zipline), auditing of smart contracts.
Engineering: Software engineering (backtesting systems), financial engineering (derivative design).
Mathematics: Statistics (advanced), stochastic calculus (conceptual), cryptography.
Critical Thinking: The «overfitting problem» in backtesting: How to regulate something decentralized (DeFi)?
Planning: Develop a rigorous investment thesis and test it statistically.
Hands-on activities
- «Backtesting» of Quant Strategy (Python): Develop and backtest a strategy (e.g. statistical arbitrage, pairs) in Python/Colab. Present the results (Sharpe ratio, drawdown).
- Smart Contract Audit (Reading): Analyze a simple smart contract in Solidity for vulnerabilities (e.g. reentrant, integer overflow).
- Regulatory Panel: «DAO vs. SEC»: Simulate a hearing. One group is a DAO (e.g. Uniswap) and the other is the SEC. Discuss: Are governance tokens a «security»?
Formative Evaluation
- Backtesting notebook (with statistical analysis).
- Smart contract audit report.
- Arguments and participation in the regulatory panel.
Integration of Ethical Values
Immutability of the Code: Is it ethical that «code is law» in DeFi, even if it allows legal but unfair «hacking»?
Systemic Risk: The responsibility of the «Quants» in financial crises.
STEM Disciplines and Skills
Science: Astrophysics, general relativity (conceptual), data science (signal processing).
Technology: Programming (Python: GWpy, Astropy), interferometer data analysis (LIGO/VIRGO).
Engineering: Detector engineering (laser interferometry - conceptual).
Mathematics: Fourier transform, statistics (signal-to-noise ratio).
Critical Thinking: What do gravitational waves tell us that light cannot?
Creativity: Explain the «fine-tuning» of the universe.
Hands-on activities
- LIGO Data Analysis (Python): Use a Colab notebook (GWpy) to filter and analyze real LIGO data. Identify the «chirp» (sound) of a black hole merger.
- Gravitational Lens Modeling: Use a simple simulator (or Python/Astropy) to model how a massive object (black hole) bends the light of a background galaxy (Einstein cross).
- Debate: The «Fine Tuning» of the Universe: Discuss the implications of «fine-tuning» of physical constants. Is it evidence of a multiverse, design, or luck (anthropic principle)?
Formative Evaluation
- Colab Notebook (with chirp graph and audio).
- Gravitational lensing simulation.
- Argumentative essay on «fine tuning».
Integration of Ethical Values
Philosophy of Cosmology: Discuss the limits of the scientific method: Is the «multiverse» a scientific (falsifiable) or metaphysical theory?
Allocation of Funds: The cost of «big science» (LIGO, JWST).
STEM Disciplines and Skills
Science: Advanced genetics (Prime/Base Editing), bioinformatics (gRNA design).
Technology: Genomic design software (Benchling, CRISPResso), databases (NCBI).
Engineering: Bioengineering, design of delivery systems (e.g. AAV, LNP - conceptual).
Mathematics: Statistics (off-target analysis), bioinformatics (sequence alignment).
Critical Thinking: Why is Prime Editing potentially safer than CRISPR-Cas9?
Collaboration: Simulate a hospital ethics committee.
Hands-on activities
- Design of «Prime Editor» (Benchling): Use Benchling (web) to design a «pegRNA» (Prime Editing guide RNA) to correct a specific mutation (e.g. sickle cell disease).
- Analysis of «Off-Targets» (Bioinformatics): Use a tool (e.g. NCBI BLAST) to simulate where else the pegRNA might cut in the genome (off-target risks).
- Ethics Committee (Simulation): Simulating a hospital ethics committee deciding on a real (anonymized) gene therapy case: approve or reject?
Formative Evaluation
- PegRNA design (with off-target analysis).
- Off-target audit report (BLAST).
- Verdict and justification of the ethics committee.
Integration of Ethical Values
Therapy vs. Enhancement: The blurred line between curing a genetic disease and «improving» a trait (e.g., intelligence, height).
Germinal Therapy: The ethics of making heritable genetic changes.
STEM Disciplines and Skills
Science: Data science (AI auditing), cognitive science (reasoning modeling).
Technology: Programming (Python, LLM APIs, Hugging Face), prompts engineering (advanced).
Engineering: Software engineering (RAG, «fine-tuning»), AI safety (AI Safety).
Mathematics: Logic (formalization of statutes), game theory (AI models).
Digital Literacy: «Jailbreaking», «prompt injection», «red teaming».
Critical Thinking: How do you «govern» an AI model? How do you align its goals with human goals?
Hands-on activities
- «Fine-Tuning» of an LLM (Colab): Use Google Colab and Hugging Face (e.g., LoRA) to fine-tuning a model (e.g., Llama 3, Mistral) on a specific dataset (e.g., poetry, code).
- «Red Teaming» / Jailbreak of an LLM: In groups, attempt to «break» an AI model (e.g. Gemini, Claude) so that it generates harmful content. Document successful prompts.
- Drafting of «IA Bylaws»: Draft governance bylaws for an AGI lab (such as OpenAI). For-profit or not-for-profit? Open or closed?
Formative Evaluation
- Fine-tuned model (with analysis of results).
- Red Teaming Report (with prompts and defenses).
- IA Governance Charter« document.
Integration of Ethical Values
Power and Control: Who should control the development of AGI: private companies, governments, international consortia?
Transparency: The debate between «Open Source» and «Closed Source» for powerful AI models.
STEM Disciplines and Skills
Science: Planetary science, physics (advanced), materials science.
Technology: Simulation software (Kerbal Space Program), CAD (advanced), Python (calculations).
Engineering: Civil/aerospace engineering (mega-projects), systems engineering.
Mathematics: Calculation (advanced), large-scale cost-benefit analysis.
Creativity: Design a solution to a planetary-scale problem.
Critical (Systemic) Thinking: Analyze the cascading risks of a megaproject (e.g. space elevator).
Hands-on activities
- Physical Analysis: «Space Elevator»: Use Python/Colab to analyze the physics of a space elevator. Calculate the cable tension and why a material such as carbon nanotubes is needed.
- Terraforming Plan (Phase 1): In groups, design «Phase 1» of the terraforming of Mars. Present a plan (engineering, costs, schedule) for an objective (e.g. «heat the core», «release CO2»).
- Debate: Ethics of Terraforming: Do we have the ethical right to «kill» a Martian ecosystem (if microbial life exists) to plant a terrestrial one? (Planetary Protection).
Formative Evaluation
- Colab Notebook (elevator calculations).
- Terraforming plan proposal (rubric).
- Argumentative essay on the ethics of terraforming.
Integration of Ethical Values
Planetary Protection: The ethics of contaminating other worlds with terrestrial life.
«Plan B»: Does having a «Plan B» (Mars) make us less responsible for taking care of «Plan A» (Earth)?
STEM Disciplines and Skills
Science: Research methodology (publication level), scientific communication.
Technology: Product development (MVP), version control (Git), publishing (ArXiv).
Engineering: Product life cycle, technical writing (patents), project management (Agile).
Mathematics: Statistical analysis (defense of results), financial projections.
Collaboration: «Peer review and oral defense.
Critical (Systemic) Thinking: Culminate a year's work in a coherent and defensible thesis or product.
Hands-on activities
- Track 1 (Research): «Thesis Defense»: Complete the paper (started in Grade 11) in LaTeX/Overleaf. Prepare a 20-minute presentation and defend it before a panel.
- Track 2 (Engineering): «Seed Capital Pitch»: Complete the MVP and pitch deck (started in Grade 11). «Pitch to a panel of »investors« (local professionals) for seed capital.
- STEM Graduation Symposium: Final event where all students present their thesis (in poster format) or «pitch» their startups (in «Demo Day» format).
Formative Evaluation
- Quality, originality and rigor of the thesis/paper (rubric).
- Quality of the MVP, business model and pitch (rubric).
- Oral defense (ability to answer questions).
Integration of Ethical Values
Intellectual Integrity: Honesty about results (even negative).
Intellectual Property: Decide the license of the project (Open Source vs. Patent).
