Difference between revisions of "Team:Cornell/Engagement"

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               <li><a href="#">OUTREACH</a>
 
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                 <ul>
 
                 <ul>
                   <li><a href="https://2017.igem.org/Team:Cornell/Collaborations">COLLABORATIONS</a></li>
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                   <li><a href="https://2017.igem.org/Team:Cornell/Connections">CONNECTIONS</a></li>
 
                   <li><a href="https://2017.igem.org/Team:Cornell/Engagement">PUBLIC ENGAGEMENT</a></li>
 
                   <li><a href="https://2017.igem.org/Team:Cornell/Engagement">PUBLIC ENGAGEMENT</a></li>
 
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         <div class="publicengagement-banner-caption-wrapper">
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           Wet Lab
           <p class="publicengagement-banner-caption">Public Engagement</p>
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                      <li><a href="#">Learning So We Can Help Others Learn</a></li>
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                    <li><a href="#">Learning So We Can Help Others Learn</a></li>
 
                       <li><a href="#">Outreach Innovation</a></li>
 
                       <li><a href="#">Outreach Innovation</a></li>
 
                       <li><a href="#">Careers Exploration Conference</a></li>
 
                       <li><a href="#">Careers Exploration Conference</a></li>
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                       <li><a href="#">Survey</a></li>
 
                       <li><a href="#">Survey</a></li>
 
                       <li><a href="#">Lab Tours and Symposiums</a></li>
 
                       <li><a href="#">Lab Tours and Symposiums</a></li>
                    </ul>
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                      <h2>Learning So We Can Help Others Learn</h2>
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                      <p>We believe that the most effective scientific communication would come with some deliberate thought about what the best way to transfer knowledge and start a conversation really would be. That is why, before starting most of our community engagement work, we dedicated time to going to workshops and reflecting on our past work to improve our own skillset.
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4H and Center for Teaching Excellence Facilitation Training
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                <!-- Page Content -->
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                <div class="col-xs-8 standard-content">
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                    <div class="overview"><a id="overview">Overview</a></div>
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                    <p>Synthetic biology has the potential to have a huge impact on the world, in everything from medicine to food production to energy. With this great power comes great responsibility. We explored the societal implications of our project with industry professionals and the local community. Through conferences, programs, and workshops, we remembered each and every one of the conversations we had - and used it to shape our project. </p>
 +
                    <div class="learning"><a id="learning">Learning So We Can Help Others Learn</a></div>
 +
                          <p>We believe that the most effective scientific communication comes with deliberate thought about the best way to transfer knowledge and start a conversation. That is why, before starting our community engagement work, we dedicated time to going to workshops and reflecting on our past work to improve our own skillset.</p>
  
4H Cooperative Extension is a network of over 100 public universities that provide youth activities in experiences. Annually the organization organized a career explorations conference for high school and middle school students to introduce them to the wide variety of different STEM fields. Cornell iGEM hosted a class in this program about the intersection of science and business, and is described further below. However, through our participation we were able to actively improve and deeply consider the styles, methods, and techniques we employ with science communication. This is so important especially when talking about something like synthetic biology which has known as a point of controversy in the large public.
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<h3>4H and Center for Teaching Excellence Facilitation Training</h3>
  
In preparation for this event, 4H partnered with the Cornell Center for Teaching Excellence to provide effective training on how to convey and teach topics interactively and with a high level of engagement. Our proposed lesson plans were workshopped and we learned how to develop programs that would not only be exciting and capture the attention of our participants, but also lead to measurable learning outcomes.
+
<p>4H Cooperative Extension is a network of over 100 public universities that provide experiences and activities for youth. The organization hosts a career explorations conference annually for high school and middle students, which introduces them to the wide variety of different STEM fields. Cornell iGEM hosted a class in this program about the intersection of science and business, which is described further before. Through our participation, we were able to actively improve and consider the styles, methods, and techniques we use to communicate science. </p>
  
Inspired by the workshop we decided that we should apply Bloom’s Taxonomy into the work that we did with students. Bloom’s Taxonomy has a series of levels, seen in the diagram below.
+
<p>In preparation for this event, 4H partnered with the Cornell Center for Teaching Excellence to provide effective training on how to convey and teach topics interactively and with a high level of engagement. Our proposed lesson plans were workshopped and we learned how to develop programs that would not only be exciting and capture the attention of our participants, but also lead to measurable learning outcomes.</p>
</p>
+
<img src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2017/4/4e/T--Cornell--BloomsTaxonomy.png" alt="Taxonomy">
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<p>As a teacher, we aimed for our participants to start at the bottom of the pyramid and work their way up. Based on the focus of every level, we developed learning objectives detailing  what we would want the participants to learn and be able to do as a result. Through this we ensured the results of our programs would be measurable and significant.  
+
  
Reflecting on Past Work
+
              <p>Inspired by the workshop, we decided that we should integrate Bloom’s Taxonomy into the work that we did with students. Bloom’s Taxonomy has a series of levels, seen in the diagram below.</p>
 +
<img src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2017/4/4e/T--Cornell--BloomsTaxonomy.png" />
 +
                    <p>As a teacher, we aimed for our participants to start at the bottom of the pyramid and work their way up. Based on the focus of every level, we developed learning objectives detailing  what we would want the participants to learn and be able to do as a result. Through this we ensured the results of our programs would be measurable and significant. </p>
  
Outreach has been a major activity of our team for the last several seasons. We always try to provide the best workshops and lessons to students who attend our programs. We thoroughly evaluated our past programs to see what we needed to improve upon for new work that we did. Not only did we reflect on how the programs ourselves, but we read over all of the feedback forms that we had participants fill out at the end of every program. The major points we decided to focus on were:
+
                    <h3>Reflecting on Past Work</h3>
Creating more hands-on demonstrations and activities to teach
+
Having presentations broken up with more activities and/or discussion
+
Gauging audiences’ background before the start of the workshop to know whether to emphasize foundational biology concepts or more advanced material
+
Providing chances within programs for participants to demonstrate and practice what they had learned
+
  
Throughout the rest of our outreach we critically reflecting on the reactions of participants, participants’ engagement level, and participants’ grasp of new concepts. We continued to collect feedback forms. Creating the best programs requires development, and we decided to strive for continuous improvement.  
+
<p>Outreach has been a major activity of our team for the last several seasons. We always try to provide the best workshops and lessons to students who attend our programs. We thoroughly evaluated our past programs to see what we needed to improve upon for new work that we did. Not only did we reflect on how the programs ourselves, but we read over all of the feedback forms that we had participants fill out at the end of every program. The major points we decided to focus on were:</p>
</p>
+
                    <li>Creating more hands-on demonstrations and activities to teach</li>
                      </div>
+
                    <li>Having presentations broken up with more activities and/or discussion</li>
                      <div class="perception">
+
                    <li>Gauging audiences’ background before the start of the workshop to know whether to emphasize foundational biology concepts or more advanced material</li>
                      <h2>Public Perceptions</h2>
+
                    <li>Providing chances within programs for participants to demonstrate and practice what they had learned</li>
                      </div>
+
 
                      <div class="careerexplore">
+
<p>Throughout the rest of our outreach we critically reflecting on the reactions of participants, participants’ engagement level, and participants’ grasp of new concepts. We continued to collect feedback forms. Creating the best programs requires development, and we decided to strive for continuous improvement. </p>
                      <h2>Career Exploration Conference</h2>
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<div class="newrow">
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                      <div class="careers"><a id="careers">Careers Exploration Conference</a></div>
<img src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2017/d/d0/T--Cornell--career1.jpg " alt="dna demonstration" style="float: left; width: 30%; margin-right: 1%; margin-bottom: 0.5em"/>
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                        <p>Every year, 4-H, a global network of organizations dedicated to youth development, sponsors a Career Explorations Conference at Cornell. The conference exposes youth to various academic fields and careers, develops their leadership skills, and gives them experience in a university setting. The theme this year was entrepreneurship. As forefronts of entrepreneurship in a synthetic biology landscape, we created a workshop bridging the gap between synthetic biology and business.</p>
<img src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2017/3/35/T--Cornell--career2.jpg" alt="presenting" style="float: left; width: 30%; margin-right: 1%; margin-bottom: 0.5em"/>
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<img src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2017/3/34/T--Cornell--career3.jpg" alt="group work" style="float: left; width: 30%; margin-right: 1%; margin-bottom: 0.5em"/>
+
</div>
+
+
<p>Every year, 4-H, a global network of organizations dedicated to youth development, sponsors a Career Explorations Conference at Cornell. The conference exposes youth to various academic fields and careers, develops their leadership skills, and gives them experience in a university setting. The theme this year was entrepreneurship. As forefronts of entrepreneurship in a synthetic biology landscape, we created a workshop bridging the gap between synthetic biology and business.  
+
  
Our students were 6th to 8th graders without biology experience. We taught them the basics of DNA, and delved further into plasmids and the extraction of DNA from wheat germ with a hand-on demonstration. After our lesson, we gave the students a chance to brainstorm ideas for their own plasmid - much like an entrepreneur. We asked them “what do you want your bacteria to do?” Here’s what they dreamt up.
+
<p>Our students were 6th to 8th graders without biology experience. We taught them the basics of DNA, and delved further into plasmids and the extraction of DNA from wheat germ with a hand-on demonstration. After our lesson, we gave the students a chance to brainstorm ideas for their own plasmid - much like an entrepreneur. We asked them “what do you want your bacteria to do?” Here’s what they dreamt up. </p>
  
 
<li>Combat air pollution by putting bacterial air filters on pigeons</li>
 
<li>Combat air pollution by putting bacterial air filters on pigeons</li>
 
<li>Use bacteria to detect proteins and presence of disease in amniotic fluid</li>
 
<li>Use bacteria to detect proteins and presence of disease in amniotic fluid</li>
 
<li>Use bacteria to create glowing airstrips</li>
 
<li>Use bacteria to create glowing airstrips</li>
 +
<img src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2017/d/d0/T--Cornell--career1.jpg " alt="dna demonstration" style="float: left; width: 30%; margin-right: 1%; margin-bottom: 0.5em"/>
 +
<img src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2017/3/35/T--Cornell--career2.jpg" alt="presenting" style="float: left; width: 30%; margin-right: 1%; margin-bottom: 0.5em"/>
 +
<img src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2017/3/34/T--Cornell--career3.jpg" alt="group work" style="float: left; width: 30%; margin-right: 1%; margin-bottom: 0.5em"/>
  
The powerpoint that we created can be found <a href="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2017/f/fa/CareerExplorationsConferencePresentation.pdf ">here</a>, and the worksheet that we created can be found <a href="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2017/5/5f/T--Cornell--CareerExplorationsWorksheet.pdf">here</a>. We encourage others to explore the intersection of synthetic biology and entrepreneurship, just like we did.</p>
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<p>The powerpoint that we created can be found <a href="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2017/f/fa/CareerExplorationsConferencePresentation.pdf ">here</a>, and the worksheet that we created can be found <a href="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2017/5/5f/T--Cornell--CareerExplorationsWorksheet.pdf">here</a>. We encourage others to explore the intersection of synthetic biology and entrepreneurship, just like we did.</p>
                     
+
                      <div class="splash">
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                      <h2>Splash! at Cornell</h2>
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                        <p>Splash! at Cornell is an educational program hosted at Cornell annually, where students can come to “teach anything, learn anything.” Cornell students teach short classes on a topic of their choosing, from immunology to salsa dance.  Naturally, it made sense for Cornell iGEM to teach what we are passionate about – synthetic biology! We developed a <a href="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2017/2/2b/T--Cornell--SplashPresentation.pdf "/> curriculum</a> that highlighted interesting aspects of synthetic biology. We taught our students about research techniques and dove into an application by presenting our 2016 project, Legendairy. We concluded with a hands on activity - loading a gel, and a discussion of bioethical issues facing synbio using <a href="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2017/3/33/T--Cornell--SplashHandout.pdf " />case studies</a>. Looks like our class made a splash!</p>
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<img src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2017/9/98/T--Cornell--Splash.jpeg"/>
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                      </div>
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                      <div class="partner">
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                      <h2>Partnering with the Next Generation</h2>
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                      </div>
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                      <div class="fair">
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                      <h2>The Great NY State Fair</h2>
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                          <p>An American tradition of over 175 years.
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An annual attendance of over a million visitors.  
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                      <div class="splash"><a id="splash">Splash! at Cornell</a></div>
 +
                          <p>Splash! at Cornell is an educational program hosted at Cornell annually, where students can come to “teach anything, learn anything.” Cornell students teach short classes on a topic of their choosing, from immunology to salsa dance.  Naturally, it made sense for Cornell iGEM to teach what we are passionate about – synthetic biology! We developed a <a href="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2017/2/2b/T--Cornell--SplashPresentation.pdf ">curriculum</a> that highlighted interesting aspects of synthetic biology. We taught our students about research techniques and dove into an application by presenting our 2016 project, Legendairy. We concluded with a hands on activity - loading a gel, and a discussion of bioethical issues facing synbio using <a href="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2017/3/33/T--Cornell--SplashHandout.pdf ">case studies</a>. Looks like our class made a splash!
 +
                    <img src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2017/9/98/T--Cornell--Splash.jpeg"/></p>
 +
                 
 +
                   
 +
                      <div class="Partnering with the Next Generation"><a id="nextgen">Partnering with the Next Generation</a></div>
 +
                    <p>We, at Cornell iGEM, know our responsibility to the Ithaca community and are more than happy to give back. As students with expansive knowledge in synthetic biology, we possess great potential to increase awareness and preparing students for this innovatively growing field. This year, we started a new mentorship program with Ithaca High School. We first launched the idea when the AP biology teacher at Ithaca High School reached out to us in June 2017. Having conducted several successful workshops with 4H extension and other organizations on campus, we pride ourselves in our unique approach  and informative introduction to synthetic biology.</p>
  
All these factors made the Great New York State Fair, a thirteen day celebration of New York agriculture, entertainment, and technology, the perfect place for Cornell iGEM to reach out to a large and receptive audience. Our aim was to bolster the fun and festivity by exhibiting our hydroponics synthetic biology application, and discussing the myriad of opinions surrounding genetic engineering.
+
<p>The goal for the mentorship project is to help students who are interested in bio-engineering in IHS to build their very own synthetic biology project team.</p>
  
Situated at the New York 4H building, we joined a wide range of education and technology exhibits targeting youth of all ages as well as parents. In our time there, we would enthusiastically break the ice by asking fairgoers a simple question, “What does synthetic biology mean to you?”
+
                    <p>During our first visit in October 2017, we shared our past project team experiences working in a collaborative and interdisciplinary environment; we described the experience of bringing a concept to life: from ideation to development to feedback stages. In addition, we shared our brainstorming process to help lead them in the right direction to develop sound synthetic biology project ideas themselves. In the coming months, we will continue to mentor them for their upcoming <a href="http://biobuilderedu.wpengine.com/program/biobuilderclub/ ">Bio-Builder</a> competition, a smaller-scale program similar to iGEM, and conduct workshops on lab techniques, teamwork and leadership.</p>
  
We encountered many families who had no idea what that meant. But by discussing and engaging their curiosity with activities from Building with Biology that illustrated synthetic biology as a way to put different pieces together to solve a problem, we were able to describe the essence of synthetic biology. Afterwards we asked them to participate in our photo campaign, called Humans of SynBio.
+
<p>The members of our own iGEM team came from a variety of backgrounds. Some of us had excellent science programs in high school, getting involved with research and entering science competitions at the national level. However, others of us had less exposure and wanted to provide greater opportunity to the students in our community. Partnering with Ithaca High School provides us and them a long-term partnership that is rewarding for the students and gives us an avenue to actively enrich our community.</p>
 +
                   
 +
                      <div class="The Great NY State Fair"><a id="fair">The Great NY State Fair</a></div>
 +
                    <p>An American tradition of over 175 years.</p>
  
It was not always consensus. During some of our conversations, we had fairgoers who shared that genetic engineering were dangerous for human health. Rather than immediately refute them, we listened and facilitated dialogue to resolve misconceptions and hear these various viewpoints. See “Actively Discussing the Issues” below for further discussion.
+
                    <p>An annual attendance of over a million visitors.</p>
</p>
+
 
                      </div>
+
<p>These factors made the Great New York State Fair, a thirteen day celebration of New York’s agriculture, entertainment, and technology, the perfect place for Cornell iGEM to reach out to a large and receptive audience. Our aim was to bolster the fun and festivity by exhibiting our hydroponics synthetic biology application, and discussing the myriad of opinions surrounding genetic engineering.</p>
                    <div class="partner">
+
 
                      <h2>Humans of Synbio</h2>
+
<p>Situated at the New York 4H building, we joined a wide range of education and technology exhibits targeting youth of all ages as well as parents. In our time there, we would enthusiastically break the ice by asking fairgoers a simple question, “What does synthetic biology mean to you?”</p>
<h3>What does synthetic biology mean to you?</h3>
+
<img src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2017/5/59/T--Cornell--NYStateFair1.jpeg"/>
                      </div>
+
<p>We encountered many families who had no idea what that meant. But by discussing and engaging their curiosity with activities from Building with Biology that illustrated synthetic biology as a way to put different pieces together to solve a problem, we were able to describe the essence of synthetic biology. Afterwards we asked them to participate in our photo campaign, called Humans of SynBio.</p>
 +
<img src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2017/0/0e/T--Cornell--NYStateFair3.jpeg"/>
 +
<p>It was not always a consensus. During some of our conversations, we had fairgoers who shared that genetic engineering were dangerous for human health. Rather than immediately refute them, we listened and facilitated dialogue to resolve misconceptions and hear these various viewpoints.</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>Ultimately, our goal was to engage in discussion with all that came to our booth, who were curious, uncertain, or apprehensive of the prospects of synthetic biology. By the time we left, we had achieved that (We also managed to eat a ton of fried dough!).</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>After visiting the state fair, we reached out to a student organization at Cornell, Debate in Science and Health, and joined in on their public forum on gene editing. Using what we learned at the state fair about people’s misconceptions and apprehension about synthetic biology, we helped catalyze important discussion on our own campus about current and future technology for genetic engineering and synthetic biology.</p>
 +
 
 +
                      <div class="Humans of Synbio"><a id="synbio">Humans of Synbio</a></div>
 +
                        <p>What does synbio mean to you?</p>
 
                     <div class="firstrow">
 
                     <div class="firstrow">
 
                     <img src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2017/a/a7/T--Cornell--HumanSynBio1.jpeg" alt="" style="float: left; width: 30%; margin-right: 1%; margin-bottom: 0.5em" />
 
                     <img src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2017/a/a7/T--Cornell--HumanSynBio1.jpeg" alt="" style="float: left; width: 30%; margin-right: 1%; margin-bottom: 0.5em" />
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                         <img src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2017/3/3f/T--Cornell--HumanSynBio6.jpeg" alt="" style="float: left; width: 30%; margin-right: 1%; margin-bottom: 0.5em" />
 
                         <img src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2017/3/3f/T--Cornell--HumanSynBio6.jpeg" alt="" style="float: left; width: 30%; margin-right: 1%; margin-bottom: 0.5em" />
 
                       </div>
 
                       </div>
                  </div>
+
                  </div>
 
+
              <div class="Collaborations"><a id="collaborations">Collaborations</a></div>
                  <div class="collaborations">
+
                      <h2>Collaborations</h2>
+
 
<p>In collaboration with Stony Brook iGEM, we conducted a survey to assess people’s thoughts on synthetic biology in New York state. One of our goals was to see if there were differing perceptions of synthetic biology in two different regions of New York, between Long Island and the Finger lakes. See the Collaborations page for more information about the outreach we did. </p>
 
<p>In collaboration with Stony Brook iGEM, we conducted a survey to assess people’s thoughts on synthetic biology in New York state. One of our goals was to see if there were differing perceptions of synthetic biology in two different regions of New York, between Long Island and the Finger lakes. See the Collaborations page for more information about the outreach we did. </p>
                    <div class="tours">
+
              <div class="Lab Tours and Symposiums"><a id="LabTours">Lab Tours and Symposium</a></div>
                      <h2>Lab Tours and Symposiums</h2>
+
              <p>RAWExpo</p>
<p>RAWExpo
+
<p>RAWExpo is an annual event at Cornell meant to showcase the work of creators in all disciplines. iGEM attended and shared our work engineering life through synthetic biology. At our display we showcased last year’s project and discussed our ideas for this year’s project. The dialogue among other groups of creators in the Cornell community, ranging from engineers building planes to design students creating fashion lines to architecture students designing structures, was beneficial for our team, and helped us more thoroughly consider the users of our project and the aesthetics of the final deliverables of our work.</p>
RAWExpo is an annual event at Cornell meant to showcase the work of creators in all disciplines. iGEM attended and shared our work engineering life through synthetic biology. At our display we showcased last year’s project and discussed our ideas for this year’s project. The dialogue among other groups of creators in the Cornell community, ranging from engineers building planes to design students creating fashion lines to architecture students designing structures, was beneficial for our team, and helped us more thoroughly consider the users of our project and the aesthetics of the final deliverables of our work.
+
              <p>MakerFaire</p>
 
+
              <p>Makerfaire
Makerfaire
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Makerfaire is a symposium in which different groups display the innovative ideas and creations they have come up with, often applying the principles of engineering. Among airplanes, cars, and model architectural structures, we showed others how to create with biological tools. We talked to visitors about the possibilities that synthetic biology could bring to reality. We discussed the types of techniques that could be used, such as cloning and CRISPR-Cas9, and also explained our past and present projects as tangible examples of what synthetic biology could accomplish. The Makerfaire was a wonderful place to showcase pushing boundaries of synthetic biology and the increasing role synthetic biology will play in society, both which iGEM encompasses.  
 
Makerfaire is a symposium in which different groups display the innovative ideas and creations they have come up with, often applying the principles of engineering. Among airplanes, cars, and model architectural structures, we showed others how to create with biological tools. We talked to visitors about the possibilities that synthetic biology could bring to reality. We discussed the types of techniques that could be used, such as cloning and CRISPR-Cas9, and also explained our past and present projects as tangible examples of what synthetic biology could accomplish. The Makerfaire was a wonderful place to showcase pushing boundaries of synthetic biology and the increasing role synthetic biology will play in society, both which iGEM encompasses.  
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              <p>Makerfaire</p>
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<p>Makerfaire is a symposium in which different groups display the innovative ideas and creations they have come up with, often applying the principles of engineering. Among airplanes, cars, and model architectural structures, we showed others how to create with biological tools. We talked to visitors about the possibilities that synthetic biology could bring to reality. We discussed the types of techniques that could be used, such as cloning and CRISPR-Cas9, and also explained our past and present projects as tangible examples of what synthetic biology could accomplish. The Makerfaire was a wonderful place to showcase pushing boundaries of synthetic biology and the increasing role synthetic biology will play in society, both which iGEM encompasses.
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              <p>Society for Women Engineers Lab Tour</p>
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              <p>Despite huge progress over the past decades, women still struggle to advance in several fields of engineering. The Cornell Society of Women Engineers organized a way for high school women to connect with Cornell engineering students. As a team with driven women pursuing STEM careers, we participated in the event. Our involvement was two-fold.</p>
  
Society for Women Engineers Lab Tour
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<p>First, we attended a tabling event where girls could chat with us about our experiences in biological, chemical, and computer engineering - all of which are components of the work that we completed through our iGEM projects. We also spoke to them about our past projects.</p>
  
Despite huge progress over the past decades, women still struggle to advance in several fields of engineering. The Cornell Society of Women Engineers organized a way for high school women to connect with Cornell engineering students. As a team with driven women pursuing STEM careers, we participated in the event. Our involvement was two-fold.  
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<p>Secondly, we hosted a lab tour for students who showed specific interest in biological or biomedical engineering. During this portion, we went into detail about our project timeline, the biological principles behind this year’s project OxyPonics, the uses of all of the laboratory equipment, and what made us want to enter engineering. Our team also has the unique culture of being very student driven, which has let us explore what interests us most in the problems we tackle and engineering solutions we develop. The young women who visited us said they felt inspired to pursue biological engineering. They were determined to break boundaries in the different fields of engineering.</p>
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<p>Prefreshman Summer Program</p>
  
First, we attended a tabling event where girls could chat with us about our experiences in biological, chemical, and computer engineering - all of which are components of the work that we completed through our iGEM projects. We also spoke to them about our past projects.
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<p>Every year, the Cornell Office of Undergraduate Biology hosts a science outreach program for the incoming freshmen on campus who are part of the Prefreshman Summer Program (PSP). A variety of engineering project teams, such as iGEM, and undergraduate scientists give lab tours and participate in a panel discussion where the incoming freshmen can learn what it is like to work in a lab and how to get involved in science on campus. We showed freshmen around our lab, including specific equipment and their purposes, talked them through what iGEM is and what our past and present projects are, and answered any questions they had about how to get involved in science at Cornell. Many of the pre-freshmen showed great interest in joining a project team or doing research on campus.</p>
  
Secondly, we hosted a lab tour for students who showed specific interest in biological or biomedical engineering. During this portion, we went into detail about our project timeline, the biological principles behind this year’s project OxyPonics, the uses of all of the laboratory equipment, and what made us want to enter engineering. Our team also has the unique culture of being very student driven, which has let us explore what interests us most in the problems we tackle and engineering solutions we develop. The young women who visited us said they felt inspired to pursue biological engineering. They were determined to break boundaries in the different fields of engineering.
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              <p>Summer Institute for Life Sciences - hosted by Cornell Office of Undergraduate Biology</p>
  
Prefreshman Summer Program
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              <p>Every summer the Office of Undergraduate Biology at Cornell University runs summer events as part of a program called the Summer Institute of Life Sciences. At the end of the summer, there is a culmination symposium. This year our team chose to give a 10-minute presentation at the seventh annual SILS symposium. This opportunity to share our work on OxyPonics with the Cornell community and visiting summer student researchers also gave us a chance to get valuable feedback from professors during the question and answer session. We also were able to learn about some really cool research other students were working on!</p>
  
Every year, the Cornell Office of Undergraduate Biology hosts a science outreach program for the incoming freshmen on campus who are part of the Prefreshman Summer Program (PSP). A variety of engineering project teams, such as iGEM, and undergraduate scientists give lab tours and participate in a panel discussion where the incoming freshmen can learn what it is like to work in a lab and how to get involved in science on campus. We showed freshmen around our lab, including specific equipment and their purposes, talked them through what iGEM is and what our past and present projects are, and answered any questions they had about how to get involved in science at Cornell. Many of the pre-freshmen showed great interest in joining a project team or doing research on campus.
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              <p>ENGRG 1050</p>
  
Summer Institute for Life Sciences - hosted by Cornell Office of Undergraduate Biology
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              <p>ENGRG 1050 is a course that all freshman engineers at Cornell are required to take. It is an opportunity to get adjusted to campus, to meet fellow students who are in similar majors, to ask upperclassmen questions, and to learn about applications to project teams such as iGEM. We presented about what we do, on how to join iGEM on campus, and answered questions from the freshmen.</p>
  
Every summer the Office of Undergraduate Biology at Cornell University runs summer events as part of a program called the Summer Institute of Life Sciences. At the end of the summer, there is a culmination symposium. This year our team chose to give a 10-minute presentation at the seventh annual SILS symposium. This opportunity to share our work on OxyPonics with the Cornell community and visiting summer student researchers also gave us a chance to get valuable feedback from professors during the question and answer session. We also were able to learn about some really cool research other students were working on!
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ENGRG 1050
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ENGRG 1050 is a course that all freshman engineers at Cornell are required to take. It is an opportunity to get adjusted to campus, to meet fellow students who are in similar majors, to ask upperclassmen questions, and to learn about applications to project teams such as iGEM. We presented about what we do, on how to join iGEM on campus, and answered questions from the freshmen.
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Revision as of 02:29, 27 October 2017

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