Difference between revisions of "Team:CCA San Diego/medal criteria"

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<h2>Medal Criteria</h2>
 
<h2>Medal Criteria</h2>
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<h3 style="color:brown">Bronze</h3>
 
<h3 style="color:brown">Bronze</h3>
<ul style="list-style-image: url('https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2017/c/c0/Bluecheck.png');width:10px>
 
  
 
<li><b>Register and Attend:</b> We’ve packed our bags for Boston and hope to enjoy our first Giant Jamboree as a team.<br></li>
 
<li><b>Register and Attend:</b> We’ve packed our bags for Boston and hope to enjoy our first Giant Jamboree as a team.<br></li>
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<li><b>Collaboration:</b> We collaborated with 4 different teams, detailed information and pictures can be found under our collaboration tab, but we meet the requirements of seeking mentors across the world, from Nebraska to Kazakhstan. With each collaboration, we sought to find ways to connect our project ideas, and to find parallels between how we could improve our projects to connect them to the community and to human practices.</li>
 
<li><b>Collaboration:</b> We collaborated with 4 different teams, detailed information and pictures can be found under our collaboration tab, but we meet the requirements of seeking mentors across the world, from Nebraska to Kazakhstan. With each collaboration, we sought to find ways to connect our project ideas, and to find parallels between how we could improve our projects to connect them to the community and to human practices.</li>
 
<li><b>Human Practices: </b>We made sure our project made a significant impact on the community as a whole, with a variety of stem days, outreach activities, and our very own iGEM summer camp. We introduced the idea of synthetic biology into the curriculum of local elementary schools and went to a variety of meetings with industry professionals, from BP, Exxon, Synthetic Genomics, and even a representative from Argonne National Laboratories. We used our project as a catalyst for increasing awareness of the nuances of biological research, and we made sure we talked to experts in the field to ensure our project was viable and potentially implementable.</li>
 
<li><b>Human Practices: </b>We made sure our project made a significant impact on the community as a whole, with a variety of stem days, outreach activities, and our very own iGEM summer camp. We introduced the idea of synthetic biology into the curriculum of local elementary schools and went to a variety of meetings with industry professionals, from BP, Exxon, Synthetic Genomics, and even a representative from Argonne National Laboratories. We used our project as a catalyst for increasing awareness of the nuances of biological research, and we made sure we talked to experts in the field to ensure our project was viable and potentially implementable.</li>
 
<h3 style="color:#747075">Silver</h3>
 
 
<li><b>Validated Parts:</b> Fluorene Degrading Combinations BBa_K2491013 BBa_K2491025 BBa_K2491026 Phenanthrene Degrading Combinations BBa_K2491027 BBa_K2491028 BBa_K2491029</li>
 
<li><b>Collaboration:</b> We collaborated with 4 different teams, detailed information and pictures can be found under our collaboration tab, but we meet the requirements of seeking mentors across the world, from Nebraska to Kazakhstan. With each collaboration, we sought to find ways to connect our project ideas, and to find parallels between how we could improve our projects to connect them to the community and to human practices.</li>
 
<li><b>Human Practices: </b>We made sure our project made a significant impact on the community as a whole, with a variety of stem days, outreach activities, and our very own iGEM summer camp. We introduced the idea of synthetic biology into the curriculum of local elementary schools and went to a variety of meetings with industry professionals, from BP, Exxon, Synthetic Genomics, and even a representative from Argonne National Laboratories. We used our project as a catalyst for increasing awareness of the nuances of biological research, and we made sure we talked to experts in the field to ensure our project was viable and potentially implementable.</li>
 
 
 
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<br>
 
<h3 style="color:#cc9900">Gold</h3>
 
<h3 style="color:#cc9900">Gold</h3>

Revision as of 03:33, 2 November 2017

Medal Criteria

Bronze

  • Register and Attend: We’ve packed our bags for Boston and hope to enjoy our first Giant Jamboree as a team.
  • Team Wiki: Our wiki is complete, with the standard pages under the iGEM logo fulfilling all the requirements posted and submitted before the Nov. 1st deadline
  • Project Attributions: Check out our Attributions page under the team tab! We’ve thanked our collaborators, advisors, teachers, and associates for the achievements we’ve had during this year’s competition.
  • Team Poster: We look forward to presenting our poster at the Giant Jamboree, it was a pleasure designing and crafting the story behind our project through this poster.
  • Team Presentation: We look forward to presenting on the subject of PAH’s and how we can degrade them through innovations in synthetic biology.
  • Safety Forms: Completed all of the safety forms, including the Safety Check-in,both About our Lab forms, and the Final Safety Form.
  • Judging Form: We’ve completed a judging form that we’ve linked at the bottom of this page

  • Registry Part Pages: We’ve submitted our parts to iGEM under the judging form, this year we submitted 6 individual parts to the BioBrick registry.
  • Interlab: We completed this year’s interlab, with our results listed under the interlab tab
  • Silver

  • Validated Parts: Fluorene Degrading Combinations BBa_K2491013 BBa_K2491025 BBa_K2491026 Phenanthrene Degrading Combinations BBa_K2491027 BBa_K2491028 BBa_K2491029
  • Collaboration: We collaborated with 4 different teams, detailed information and pictures can be found under our collaboration tab, but we meet the requirements of seeking mentors across the world, from Nebraska to Kazakhstan. With each collaboration, we sought to find ways to connect our project ideas, and to find parallels between how we could improve our projects to connect them to the community and to human practices.
  • Human Practices: We made sure our project made a significant impact on the community as a whole, with a variety of stem days, outreach activities, and our very own iGEM summer camp. We introduced the idea of synthetic biology into the curriculum of local elementary schools and went to a variety of meetings with industry professionals, from BP, Exxon, Synthetic Genomics, and even a representative from Argonne National Laboratories. We used our project as a catalyst for increasing awareness of the nuances of biological research, and we made sure we talked to experts in the field to ensure our project was viable and potentially implementable.

  • Gold


    email igemcca@gmail.com
    Canyon Crest Academy iGEM 2017 CC;