Team:Carnegie Mellon/Presentations

From 2013.igem.org

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<h1>Presentations to High School students and Undergraduates</h2>
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<p><b>June 28th</b></p>
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<p>A presentation about iGEM, Synthetic Biology, and Antibiotic Resistance was given at the University of Pittsburgh to 30 students in several summer programs: Systems Medicine REU (SysMed) program in the Chemical Engineering Department; Training and Experimentation in Computational Biology (<a href="http://www.tecbioreu.pitt.edu/">TECBio</a>) program for undergraduate students in the Department of Computational and Systems Biology; Drug Discovery, Systems and Computational Biology (DiSCoBio) program for high school students in the Department of Computational and Systems Biology, and part of the <a href="http://www.upci.upmc.edu/summeracademy/">UPCI Summer Academy Program</a>.</p>
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<p><b>July 19th</b></p>
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<p>High school students participating in the CMU Summer Academy for Mathematics + Science, <a href="http://www.cmu.edu/enrollment/summerprogramsfordiversity/faq.html">SAMS</a> summer programs came to visit the lab to hear about the iGEM project as part of a lab “scavenger hunt”. The team gave short 5 minute presentations to 8 small groups of about two students each, explaining the biological advantages that bacteriophage and our system in particular have over antibiotics.</p>
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Revision as of 17:57, 27 September 2013

Killer Red




Presentations to High School students and Undergraduates

June 28th

A presentation about iGEM, Synthetic Biology, and Antibiotic Resistance was given at the University of Pittsburgh to 30 students in several summer programs: Systems Medicine REU (SysMed) program in the Chemical Engineering Department; Training and Experimentation in Computational Biology (TECBio) program for undergraduate students in the Department of Computational and Systems Biology; Drug Discovery, Systems and Computational Biology (DiSCoBio) program for high school students in the Department of Computational and Systems Biology, and part of the UPCI Summer Academy Program.


July 19th

High school students participating in the CMU Summer Academy for Mathematics + Science, SAMS summer programs came to visit the lab to hear about the iGEM project as part of a lab “scavenger hunt”. The team gave short 5 minute presentations to 8 small groups of about two students each, explaining the biological advantages that bacteriophage and our system in particular have over antibiotics.