Team:Heidelberg/Outreach

From 2013.igem.org

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                     <div id="youngbox" class="box" data-name="The young generation" data-desc="Thirdly, we wish to involve the young generation to a special extent, as they are the future of this society and future scientists. Our project is designed to provide a sustainable alternative to classical gold recovery; hence it affects especially next generations. We therefore wanted to know what high school students think about our project and how they imagined the future if our project was to be realized. We organized an essay competition where students from the Life Science Lab Heidelberg at the DKFZ (German Cancer Research Center) could participate and hand in essays dealing with the consequences and implications of bacteria-facilitated gold recovery for either society and politics, economy and industry, the environment or on an individual level. We selected the best-written essays and invited the respective authors for a tour in our lab.<br /><br />
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                     <div id="youngbox" class="box" data-name="The young generation" data-desc="Thirdly, we wish to involve the young generation to a special extent, as they are the <b>future of this society and future scientists</b>. Our project is designed to provide a sustainable alternative to classical gold recovery; hence it affects especially next generations. We therefore wanted to know what high school students think about our project and how they imagined the future if our project was to be realized. We organized an essay competition where students from the <a href="https://www.life-science-lab.org/cms/">Life Science Lab Heidelberg</a> at the DKFZ (German Cancer Research Center) could participate and hand in essays dealing with the consequences and implications of bacteria-facilitated gold recovery for either society and politics, economy and industry, the environment or on an individual level. We selected the best-written essays and invited the respective authors for a tour in our lab.<br />
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We are grateful for the input we received as the different aspects and target groups were covered byin the individual essays. The essay one that, to our minds, describinges these far-reaching consequences best was submitted by Isabel Marleen Pötzsch. ">
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We are grateful for the input we received as the different aspects and target groups were covered by the individual essays. The essay describing these far-reaching consequences best was submitted by Isabel Marleen Pötzsch. ">
                           <div class="btn btn-default btn-lg" style="vertical-align:middle; background-color:rgba(255, 255, 255, 0.9);" >Young Generation <span id= "glyphicon3" class="glyphicon glyphicon-chevron-down"></span><span class="text-left" id="expertnames" style="font-size:12px;"> <br><br>Essay Competition <br></span>
                           <div class="btn btn-default btn-lg" style="vertical-align:middle; background-color:rgba(255, 255, 255, 0.9);" >Young Generation <span id= "glyphicon3" class="glyphicon glyphicon-chevron-down"></span><span class="text-left" id="expertnames" style="font-size:12px;"> <br><br>Essay Competition <br></span>
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Revision as of 12:08, 4 October 2013

Human Practice

Talk Evening 24th October 2013, 6pm @ BioQuant, Heidelberg

Experts

Prof. Dr. Rainer Zawatzky

Dorothea van Aaken

ABC Unit of German Armed Forces

TBM Edelmetall Recycling
GeneralPublic

Introductory Talks

Secular Humanists
Life Science Lab Heidelberg at the DKFZ (German Cancer Research Center) could participate and hand in essays dealing with the consequences and implications of bacteria-facilitated gold recovery for either society and politics, economy and industry, the environment or on an individual level. We selected the best-written essays and invited the respective authors for a tour in our lab.
We are grateful for the input we received as the different aspects and target groups were covered by the individual essays. The essay describing these far-reaching consequences best was submitted by Isabel Marleen Pötzsch. ">
Young Generation

Essay Competition
Art & Science

Not invented by Nature

Project by Joanna

Our project is designed to provide knowledge to a broader spectrum of people by creating a framework for in vivo peptide synthesis by NRPS including a design-tool for customization of the desired peptides. Therefore, we believe that it is of very high priority to inform the public about our project and to receive feedback and personal perceptions from the society. Hence, we build our concept for the interaction with the public upon four pillars: First, interaction and cooperation with experts from multiple scientific fields, second, interaction with the society in general and third, the young generation in particular. Finally, a close cooperation with artists is the fourth pillar. We round off our human practice advance by bringing together these four pillars under the roof of a talk evening on our future with synthetic biology, allowing interaction and discussion among them.

As conclusion, we believe that our Human Practice advance is well-established on different levels of interaction, as we searched the dialogue with various groups within the society. Furthermore, we strongly believe that we could open up people’s minds to synthetic biology and that we were able to clarify several misunderstanding or misconceptions. This impression is not only our belief, but was also the major feedback we received during our work for Human Practices. In addition to that, the exchange of impression was also very valuable for us and the advance within our project: Often the truth is as an object on a round table, if seen from one position it may clearly be identified as one contour, but from another point of view, it may be something completely different. Choosing the dialogue with people from different backgrounds would then be similar to moving around the table and to understand the nature of the object at the center at least a little better.