Difference between revisions of "Team:BostonU/Engagement"

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<p class="body-type mainwrap">From the start of our project, we focused on sharing our work and starting conversations about synthetic biology with our community. During the summer, we facilitated an outreach event called Summer Pathways along the BU Hardware Team and the STEM Pathways organization. <a href="https://www.programmingbiology.org/outreach">STEM Pathway</a>is a new outreach organization at Boston University with the objective to inspire, mentor, train, and empower current and future generations of students, with a focus on underrepresented groups.</p>
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<p class="body-type mainwrap">From the start of our project, we focused on sharing our work and starting conversations about synthetic biology with our community. During the summer, we facilitated an outreach event called Summer Pathways along the BU Hardware Team and the STEM Pathways organization. <a href="https://www.programmingbiology.org/outreach">STEM Pathways</a>is a new outreach organization at Boston University with the objective to inspire, mentor, train, and empower current and future generations of students, with a focus on underrepresented groups.</p>
 
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<p class="body-type mainwrap">We realized after this workshop that lab techniques such as gel electrophoresis and plasmid design are easier to explain in person with a demonstration than simply reading about them. Gel Electrophoresis and plasmid design are common techniques used by biologists, but explaining how they works can be challenging. We anticipate that this challenge would extend and worsen when trying to explain our own project, as the level of specificity increases. We wondered if there was a way to bridge this gap and improve our ability to explain synthetic biology processes and our own project without getting bogged down in technicalities. </p>
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<p class="body-type mainwrap">We realized after this workshop that lab techniques such as gel electrophoresis and plasmid design are easier to explain in person with a demonstration than simply reading about them. Gel Electrophoresis and plasmid design are common techniques used by biologists, but explaining how they works can be challenging. We anticipate that this challenge would extend and worsen when trying to explain our own project, as the level of specificity increases. We wondered if there was a way to bridge this gap and improve our ability to explain synthetic biology processes and our own project without getting bogged down in technicalities. </p>
 
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<p class="body-type mainwrap">In August, we had the opportunity to visit Gingko Bioworks, a biotechnology startup in Boston. We saw work done by a visiting artist who was using bacteria to dye fabrics. We learned that Gingko Bioworks uses art made with or about synthetic biology to spark conversations with the community, and thought this was a fantastic idea. With our focus on engaging the community, we developed an art project that could be used to start conversations about synthetic biology. Titled <a href="#">“Circadia Synthetica,”</a>  the theme of our art is synthetic modification related to circadian rhythms. Specifically, the project explores three layers of circadian rhythms - in bacteria, plants, and humans - and how existing cycles on Earth could be modified to enable human life on Mars. </p>
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<p class="body-type mainwrap">In August, we had the opportunity to visit Gingko Bioworks, a biotechnology startup in Boston. We saw work done by a visiting artist who was using bacteria to dye fabrics. We learned that Gingko Bioworks uses art made with or about synthetic biology to spark conversations with the community, and thought this was a fantastic idea. With our focus on engaging the community, we developed an art project that could be used to start conversations about synthetic biology. Titled <a href="#">“Circadia Synthetica,”</a>  the theme of our art is synthetic modification related to circadian rhythms. Specifically, the project explores three layers of circadian rhythms - in bacteria, plants, and humans - and how existing cycles on Earth could be modified to enable human life on Mars. </p>
 
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Revision as of 03:31, 31 October 2017

ENGAGEMENT AND OUTREACH