Giving Compass' Take:

• Smithsonian magazine profiles a remarkable high school sophomore from Maryland named Jack Andraka, who may have invented a groundbreaking new test that can detect pancreatic cancer at earlier stages.

• Two main takeaways from this inspirational story: First, we need more investment for research into pancreatic cancer, which kills 40,000 people every year and is difficult to diagnose early. Second, we should be supporting high-quality STEM programs in schools to produce more amazing kids like Andraka!

• Check out this guide on where you can make the most impact in cancer research.


It’s first period digital arts class, and the assignment is to make Photoshop monsters. Sophomore Jack Andraka considers crossing a velociraptor with a Brazilian wandering spider, while another boy grafts butterfly wings onto a rhinoceros. Meanwhile, the teacher lectures on the deranged genius of Doctor Moreau and Frankenstein, “a man who created something he didn’t take responsibility for.”

“You don’t have to do this, Jack!” somebody in back shouts ...

The silver glint of a retainer: Andraka grins. Since he won the $75,000 grand prize at this past spring’s Intel International Science and Engineering Fair, one of the few freshman ever to do so, he’s become a North County High School celebrity to rival any soccer star or homecoming queen. A series of jokes ensue about Andraka’s mad scientist doings in the school’s imaginary “dungeon” laboratory. In reality, Andraka created his potentially revolutionary pancreatic cancer detection tool at nearby Johns Hopkins University, though he does sometimes tinker in a small basement lab at the family’s house in leafy Crownsville, Maryland, where a homemade particle accelerator crowds the foosball table.

Read the full article about Jack Andraka, the teen prodigy of pancreatic cancer by Abigail Tucker at Smithsonian.com.