Team:Michigan/Outreach/

From 2014.igem.org

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<h1><font size="10"> Industry Partnerships: Covance</font></h1></p><font size="3"><font color="#191970"> University of Michigan iGEM Team </font></font color></p>
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<h1><font size="10"> Scientific Outreach</font></h1></p><font size="3"><font color="#191970"> University of Michigan iGEM Team </font></font color></p>
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<p style="position:absolute;top:100px;"> After our initial planning of the project, we sought input from the Battle Creek, Michigan branch of Covance Incorporated, an established pharmaceutical and biotechnology corporation that provides testing services for the food and environmental industries, in addition to providing custom antibody products for the research community. </p>
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<p style="position:absolute;top:100px;"> This year our team reached out to the community by educating middle-and-high school aged girls on the tools used in synthetic biology. We hope to help future scientists get involved at an early age and promote gender diversity. We feel it is important to help educate the next generation of women in science by giving them the opportunity to work with DNA and learn the principles of synthetic biology at a young age.
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<p style="position:absolute;top:177px;width:574px"> Meeting with Christine Gwinn, a microbiology supervisor in the department of nutritional chemistry and food safety, we gleaned valuable information pertaining to our project’s direction.  In any application of antibodies for detection, Gwinn stressed the importance of specificity and time.  For industrial use, detection methods must be highly specific, as any cross reactions reporting false positives would prove highly costly, especially in the food industry.  Furthermore, detection services demand quick turn-around times for results, in order for this data to be delivered to clients on strict timetables. </p>
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<p style="position:absolute;top:500px;width:884"> U of M hosts an annual summer camp called GISE (Girls In Science and Engineering) aimed at getting middle school aged girls involved with science. We collaborated with GISE by leading a camp session on synthetic biology.  Our time with the middle schoolers and high schoolers not only allowed the girls to get a look into what studying science in college entails, it also gave our team members experience mentoring the girls, a win-win in the end. We helped the campers extract DNA from strawberries and bananas, compare the yield of DNA, and hypothesize what could cause the difference in yield. The girls were also able to make necklaces out of their own DNA, following a cheek swab and DNA isolation.
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<p style="position:absolute;top:355px;width:884px"> Through this meeting with Christine Gwinn of Covance, we were able to gauge the practicality of our project and modify it to demonstrate the possible applications of our construct. By allowing simplified antibody purification, we could make improvements in the time it takes to go from demand to detection.</p>
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<p style="position:absolute;top:833px;width:884px"> We received outstanding feedback from the campers, many of whom were repeat campers from previous years. Some of the girls who attended the camp several years ago, are now prospective team members for our team next year and have attended our practice presentations for the conference in Boston. We feel that this in itself is a great sign that our work with the girls is spreading the word on synthetic biology and building interest in the team.
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Latest revision as of 22:29, 17 October 2014

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This year our team reached out to the community by educating middle-and-high school aged girls on the tools used in synthetic biology. We hope to help future scientists get involved at an early age and promote gender diversity. We feel it is important to help educate the next generation of women in science by giving them the opportunity to work with DNA and learn the principles of synthetic biology at a young age.

U of M hosts an annual summer camp called GISE (Girls In Science and Engineering) aimed at getting middle school aged girls involved with science. We collaborated with GISE by leading a camp session on synthetic biology. Our time with the middle schoolers and high schoolers not only allowed the girls to get a look into what studying science in college entails, it also gave our team members experience mentoring the girls, a win-win in the end. We helped the campers extract DNA from strawberries and bananas, compare the yield of DNA, and hypothesize what could cause the difference in yield. The girls were also able to make necklaces out of their own DNA, following a cheek swab and DNA isolation.

We received outstanding feedback from the campers, many of whom were repeat campers from previous years. Some of the girls who attended the camp several years ago, are now prospective team members for our team next year and have attended our practice presentations for the conference in Boston. We feel that this in itself is a great sign that our work with the girls is spreading the word on synthetic biology and building interest in the team.