At UAB Brain Bee, Puja Chopade named champion; Neha Chopade, Brock Senel in Top Five
Puja Chopade, at left, and Neha Chopade, who are sisters, take a break from studying for Brain Bee to pet the family’s chickens. CONTRIBUTED
Bob Jones High School, James Clemens High School, Madison, Madison County Record, News, Schools, Z - News Main
 By  GreggParker Published 
6:31 pm Thursday, March 10, 2022

At UAB Brain Bee, Puja Chopade named champion; Neha Chopade, Brock Senel in Top Five

MADISON – This year, Puja Chopade from Bob Jones High School again claimed the title of Alabama Brain Bee Champion. Puja has won the first-place honor for two consecutive years.

The host for the competition on March 5 was the Neuroscience Department at the University of Alabama at Birmingham or UAB. Typically, Brain Bee activities are held in conjunction with the annual UAB Neuroscience Day. (uab.edu/brainbee)

The 2022 contest was conducted in virtual mode with 27 participants.

This year, Puja Chopade encouraged more participation from students at Bob Jones and James Clemens high schools. In 2021, Puja Chopade and Neha Chopade were the only two students to represent Bob Jones. This year, five juniors from Bob Jones participated

Madison students in the Top Five were Puja Chopade in first place and Neha Chopade in fourth place from Bob Jones and Brock Senel in fifth place from James Clemens.

The Top 10 includes Emily Lee and Thais Arslanbekov, also from Bob Jones.

Puja not only encouraged and guided the students but also conducted one- to two-hour virtual classes. Prospective participants studied the Brain Bee course material and asked questions for Puja to answer.

Brain Bee is open to all Alabama high school students, free of charge. The contest includes a multiple-choice written test and the oral round. The top ten performers in the written test will participate in the oral round. An official will ask each student to respond quickly to a neuroscience question.

This process continues to identify the final three students. The last student ‘standing’ will be named 2022 Alabama Brain Bee Champion.

The national competition consists of neuroanatomical practicals, neurohistological slide readings, patient diagnosis and MRI reading components.

Brain Bee’s founders urge youth to learn more about the brain. The young adults’ energy and passion can help in finding cures for autism, Parkinson’s disease, multiple sclerosis, spinal cord injury and other brain disorders.

For more information, visit uab.edu/brainbee.

Also on The Madison Record
Driving Nights return to Galaxy of Lights at Huntsville Botanical Garden
Events, Madison County Record, Madison Living, ...
Garden’s largest fundraiser celebrates 30-year milestone with time-honored tradition
John Few 
December 4, 2025
HUNTSVILLE – Huntsville Botanical Garden’s annual holiday light experience, Galaxy of Lights, will switch to Driving Nights on December 7-16. Recogniz...
Historic downtown comes alive with new Madison entertainment district
A: Main, Business, Lifestyles, ...
Downtown Madison
By TIMATHY KELLEY news@themadisonrecord.com 
December 3, 2025
MADISON - City officials, business owners, and community partners gathered Monday in the heart of Historic Downtown Madison to celebrate the long-anti...
Taste and judge the best at Wassail Festival on Dec. 5
Business, Events, Madison County Record, ...
Gregg Parker 
December 3, 2025
MADISON – One component – and this one is tasty – of Christmas revelry in downtown Madison will be the fifth annual Wassail Festival. Retail stores an...
Blue Apple to host authors, an aviator, mahjong…and pound cake!
Events, Lifestyles, Madison County Record, ...
Gregg Parker 
December 3, 2025
MADISON – Blue Apple Books has scheduled a full lineup in early December with authors, an aviator, a trunk…even pound cake. Blue Apple Books and Madis...

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *