Difference between revisions of "Team:BostonU/Engagement"

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<p class="body-type mainwrap">  The purpose of Summer Pathways was to introduce a group of 20 female high school students to synthetic biology. We organized and led four activities: Plasmid Design, Microfluidic Chip Design, Gel Electrophoresis, and a Bioethics Forum. In the Plasmid Design workshop, we showed them our plasmid repository on Benchling and sequences of plasmids that we actually used in the lab. We taught them the theory behind cloning parts into a backbone using restriction enzymes through the use of paper plasmids and restriction enzyme scissors.  </p>
 
<p class="body-type mainwrap">  The purpose of Summer Pathways was to introduce a group of 20 female high school students to synthetic biology. We organized and led four activities: Plasmid Design, Microfluidic Chip Design, Gel Electrophoresis, and a Bioethics Forum. In the Plasmid Design workshop, we showed them our plasmid repository on Benchling and sequences of plasmids that we actually used in the lab. We taught them the theory behind cloning parts into a backbone using restriction enzymes through the use of paper plasmids and restriction enzyme scissors.  </p>
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<p class="body-type mainwrap">In the Microfluidic Chip Design Workshop, ran in collaboration with the BU Hardware team, the students were given a brief information session about what microfluidic chips. Then the BU Hardware team helped the students design microfluidic chips out of cardboard. During the Gel Electrophoresis workshop, we brought the students into our lab and taught them how to load a gel using colored dye. We ran the gel and illustrated how the colors separated, explaining that this is analogous to how it appears when DNA fragments separate out based on size.  </p>
 
<p class="body-type mainwrap">In the Microfluidic Chip Design Workshop, ran in collaboration with the BU Hardware team, the students were given a brief information session about what microfluidic chips. Then the BU Hardware team helped the students design microfluidic chips out of cardboard. During the Gel Electrophoresis workshop, we brought the students into our lab and taught them how to load a gel using colored dye. We ran the gel and illustrated how the colors separated, explaining that this is analogous to how it appears when DNA fragments separate out based on size.  </p>
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<img src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2017/8/81/T--BostonU--Gel.jpg" height = "250" width = "400"></img>  
 
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<img src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2017/5/53/T--BostonU--Microfluidics1.jpg" height = "250" width = "400"></img>
 
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Revision as of 19:14, 1 November 2017

ENGAGEMENT AND OUTREACH