Difference between revisions of "Team:Stanford-Brown/Practices"

 
(15 intermediate revisions by 4 users not shown)
Line 12: Line 12:
 
   <link rel="icon" href="../../favicon.ico">
 
   <link rel="icon" href="../../favicon.ico">
  
   <title>SB iGEM 2015 Practices</title>
+
   <title>Projects</title>
  
 
</head>
 
</head>
 +
 
<body>
 
<body>
   
 
    <div class="jumbotron oridomiLeft">
 
      <div class="container">
 
        <h1>Human Practices! <br> <small>Outreach and Eduction</small></h1>
 
      </div>
 
    </div><!-- end jumbotron -->
 
 
    <!-- START THE FEATURETTES -->
 
  
 +
  <div class="jumbotron oridomiLeft">
 
     <div class="container">
 
     <div class="container">
  
       <div class="row featurette">
+
       <div class="col-lg-8">
        <div class="col-md-7 well">
+
        <h1>Human Practices <small> <br>How our projects fit into the world<small></h1>    
          <h2 class="featurette-heading">2015 Bay Area Maker Faire <span class="small">Spreading the love of synthetic biology</span></h2>
+
          <p class="lead">In May 2015, our team participated in the 2015 Bay Area Maker Faire. We presented the Stanford-Brown iGEM projects to a variety of people, from scientists to young children, and had interactive activities such as origami and DNA extractions to spread the love of synthetic biology. </p>
+
        </div><!-- end well -->
+
        <div class="col-md-5">
+
          <img class="featurette-image img-responsive center-block" data-src="holder.js/500x500/auto" alt="Generic placeholder image">
+
        </div><!-- end col-md-5 -->
+
 
       </div>
 
       </div>
 +
    </div><!--end container-->
 +
  </div><!-- end jumbotron-->
  
      <div class="row featurette">
+
</div><!-- end jumbotron-->
        <div class="col-md-7 col-md-push-5 well">
+
          <h2 class="featurette-heading">Poster sessions and presentations <span class="small">Interacting with other researchers</span></h2>
+
          <p class="lead">We undertook several poster sessions and gave presentations during the summer to showcase our work at various events, including the California Academy of Sciences, NASA Ames ASL poster sessions, Stanford REU program presentation sessions.  </p>
+
        </div>
+
        <div class="col-md-5 col-md-pull-7">
+
          <img class="featurette-image img-responsive center-block" data-src="holder.js/500x500/auto" alt="Generic placeholder image">
+
        </div>
+
      </div>
+
  
      <div class="row featurette">
+
<!-- START THE FEATURETTES -->
        <div class="col-md-7 panel">
+
          <h2 class="featurette-heading">Interviews <span class="small">Picking the brains of experts</span></h2>
+
          <p class="lead">We interviewed several scientists specializing in different fields, and asked them what they would do with biOrigami./p>
+
          </div>
+
          <div class="col-md-5">
+
            <img class="featurette-image img-responsive center-block" data-src="holder.js/500x500/auto" alt="Generic placeholder image">
+
          </div>
+
        </div>
+
  
        <div class="row featurette">
+
<div class="container">
          <div class="col-md-7 col-md-push-5 well">
+
 
            <h2 class="featurette-heading">Collaboration <span class="small">Because collaboration between researchers is greater than the sum of its parts</span></h2>
+
<div class="row featurette">
            <p class="lead">We collaborated with the Edinburgh iGEM team on their biosensors and participated in the InterLab Study to help contribute to the iGEM community. </p>
+
 
          </div>
+
  <div class="row featurette">
          <div class="col-md-5 col-md-pull-7">
+
    <div class="" id="">
            <img class="featurette-image img-responsive center-block" data-src="holder.js/500x500/auto" alt="Generic placeholder image">
+
      <h2 class="featurette-heading">Public Outreach, Engaging with Peers, and Interviews with Experts<span class="small"> <br></span></h2>
          </div>
+
      <p class="lead">Our team participated in various activities throughout the summer that fall under the spectrum of "Human Practices." At the Bay Area Maker Faire and the California Academy of Sciences, we discussed synthetic biology, iGEM, and our project with members of the public. We gave and attended presentations on research projects done by our peers at Stanford, NASA, and other Northern California schools. And, to better understand potential uses of and needs for biOrigami in space, we interviewed six experts from NASA and Brown University. </p>
        </div>
+
   
  
<div class="row featurette">
 
      <div class="col-md-7 well">
 
        <h2 class="featurette-heading">2015 Bay Area Maker Faire <span class="small">Synthetic biology as part of the Maker Movement</span></h2>
 
        <p class="lead">In May 2015, our team held a booth at the 2015 Bay Area Maker Faire. We discussed our team's project ideas, previous Stanford-Brown teams' projects, and synthetic biology as it fits into the Maker movement more broadly. We also led interactive activities such as origami folding and DNA extractions, and had posters with questions such as "If you could make anything with biology, what would you make?" with opportunities to write and draw answers. This was a great opportunity for us to get feedback from the public on our project ideas.</p>
 
      </div><!-- end well -->
 
      <div class="col-md-5">
 
        <img class="featurette-image img-responsive center-block" src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2015/4/4b/SB2015_maker_faire_2.jpeg" alt="show the picture">
 
      </div><!-- end col-md-5 -->
 
 
     </div>
 
     </div>
  
     <div class="row featurette">
+
<!--     <div class="col-md-5">
       <div class="col-md-7 col-md-push-5 well">
+
      <h2 class="featurette-heading">Our BioBricks</h2>
        <h2 class="featurette-heading">Poster sessions and presentations <span class="small">Interacting with other researchers</span></h2>
+
       <p class="lead">The BioBricks that we submitted to the registry are related to plastic production, cellulose binding, sporulation markers, and pigment production. Click to see more.</p>
        <p class="lead">We participated in poster sessions and gave presentations throughout the summer to showcase our work and learn from our peers. Our audiences included the the students at the NASA Ames Advanced Studies Laboratories, the participants of the Sierra Systems and Synbio Symposium, and the recipients of the Stanford Bioengineering Research Experience for Undergraduate grants. </p>
+
    </div>s
      </div>
+
  </div> -->
      <div class="col-md-5 col-md-pull-7">
+
 
        <img class="featurette-image img-responsive center-block" src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2015/b/bb/SB2015_reno_outreach_1.jpg" alt="Generic placeholder image">
+
  <hr>
      </div>
+
 
 +
 
 +
  <div class="row featurette">
 +
    <div class="col-md-7 col-md-push-5" id="be2">
 +
      <h2 class="featurette-heading">California Academy of Sciences <span class="small"> <br>Interacting with the public in a science museum</span></h2>
 +
      <p class="lead">BOur team went to the California Academy of Sciences, a museum in San Francisco, California and gave a presentation on our projects to several senior staff members. This also gave us the opportunity to get the perspective of Dr. Meg Lowman ("Canopy Meg"), a rainforest canopy researcher, on uses for biological, self-folding objects in her line of work. We were invited back to hold a demonstration of biOrigami in the museum, during which museum goers were invited to experiment with folding sheets of thermoplastic using an infrared lamp. We provided Shrinky Dink sheets and different colors of markers, explained the molecular mechanisms behind folding using heat, and asked participants to predict what shapes would be created from their designs. Members of our team were also interviewed and filmed by media specialists at the Cal Academy for a video on synthetic biology and our iGEM team that will be released soon.</p>
 
     </div>
 
     </div>
 +
    <div class="col-md-5 col-md-pull-7">
 +
<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>
 +
      <img class="featurette-image img-responsive center-block img-rounded" src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2015/6/6a/SB2015_canopy_meg.JPG" alt="Subproject Overview">
 +
    </div>
 +
  </div>
 +
 +
  <hr>
 +
 +
  <div class="row featurette">
 +
    <div class="col-md-7" id="be3">
 +
      <h2 class="featurette-heading">2015 Bay Area Maker Faire <span class="small"> <br>Synthetic biology as part of the Maker Movement</span></h2>
 +
      <p class="lead">In May 2015, our team held a booth at the 2015 Bay Area Maker Faire. We discussed our team's project ideas, previous Stanford-Brown teams' projects, and synthetic biology as it fits into the Maker movement more broadly. We also led interactive activities such as origami folding and DNA extractions, and had posters with questions such as "If you could make anything with biology, what would you make?" with opportunities to write and draw answers. This was a great opportunity for us to get feedback from the public on our project ideas.</p>
 +
    </div>
 +
  <div class="pull-right">
 +
              <a href="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2015/4/4b/SB2015_maker_faire_2.jpeg" target="_blank">
 +
    <img src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2015/4/4b/SB2015_maker_faire_2.jpeg" class="pull-right img-rounded img-responsive" width="500">
 +
  </a>
 +
          </div> 
 +
  </div>
 +
 +
  <hr>
 +
 +
  <div class="row featurette">
 +
    <div class="col-md-7 col-md-push-5" id="be4">
 +
      <h2 class="featurette-heading">Poster sessions and presentations <span class="small"> <br>Interacting with other researchers</span></h2>
 +
      <p class="lead">We participated in several poster sessions and gave presentations during the summer to showcase our work and learn about the work of our peers at Stanford, NASA, and other school in Northern California. These events included presentations to the recipients of the Stanford Research Experience for Undergraduates in Bioengineering grants, the summer students at the NASA Advanced Studies Laboratories, and the attendees of the Sierra Systems and Synbio Symposium. </p>
 +
    </div>
 +
    <div class="col-md-5 col-md-pull-7">
 +
      <img class="featurette-image img-responsive center-block img-rounded" src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2015/b/bb/SB2015_reno_outreach_1.jpg" alt="Generic placeholder image">
 +
    </div>
 +
  </div>
 +
 +
  <hr>
 +
 +
  <div class="pull-right">
 +
        <video poster="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2015/7/74/144262371155019.png" controls width="558" height="316">
 +
            <source src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2015/3/3d/SB2015_long_movie_4.mp4" type='video/mp4'/>
 +
            <a href="https://youtu.be/70O1agsZKV4"><img border="0" src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2015/7/74/144262371155019.png" alt="Click to view on Youtube" width="558" height="316"></a>
 +
            <p style="font-style:italic;color:red;border-style:solid;border-width:2px;border-color:red">Your browser either does not support HTML5 or cannot handle MediaWiki open video formats. Please consider upgrading your browser, installing the appropriate plugin or switching to a Firefox or Chrome install.</p>
 +
        </video>
 +
</div>
 +
 +
    <h2 class="featurette-heading">Interviews with Experts<span class="small"> <br>Input and ideas from experts in space missions</span></h2>
 +
    <p class="lead">When conceptualizing and developing our project, we wanted to make sure that it could fulfill an actual need for NASA's missions. We are grateful to have been able to interview several scientists from NASA, the Rhode Island Space Grant, and Brown University. Four of their interviews were video taped, and are available to watch here.  The transcript of these interviews are available <a href="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2015/8/86/Experts_Space.pdf">here</a>.</p>
 +
 +
       
 +
  
      </div><!-- end container -->
 
  
      <!-- /END THE FEATURETTES -->
+
</div><!-- /.container -->
 +
<!-- /END THE FEATURETTES -->
  
      <footer>
+
<footer>
        <div class="container">
+
  <div class="container">
          <hr></hr>
+
    <hr></hr>
          <div class="row">
+
    <div class="row">
            <h6>Copyright &copy; 2015 Stanford-Brown iGEM Team</h6>
+
      <h6>Copyright &copy; 2015 Stanford-Brown iGEM Team</h6>
          </div><!-- end row -->
+
    </div><!-- end row -->
        </div><!-- end container -->
+
  </div><!-- end container -->
      </footer>
+
</footer>
  
 
<!-- Bootstrap core JavaScript
 
<!-- Bootstrap core JavaScript

Latest revision as of 01:26, 19 September 2015

Projects

Human Practices
How our projects fit into the world

Public Outreach, Engaging with Peers, and Interviews with Experts

Our team participated in various activities throughout the summer that fall under the spectrum of "Human Practices." At the Bay Area Maker Faire and the California Academy of Sciences, we discussed synthetic biology, iGEM, and our project with members of the public. We gave and attended presentations on research projects done by our peers at Stanford, NASA, and other Northern California schools. And, to better understand potential uses of and needs for biOrigami in space, we interviewed six experts from NASA and Brown University.


California Academy of Sciences
Interacting with the public in a science museum

BOur team went to the California Academy of Sciences, a museum in San Francisco, California and gave a presentation on our projects to several senior staff members. This also gave us the opportunity to get the perspective of Dr. Meg Lowman ("Canopy Meg"), a rainforest canopy researcher, on uses for biological, self-folding objects in her line of work. We were invited back to hold a demonstration of biOrigami in the museum, during which museum goers were invited to experiment with folding sheets of thermoplastic using an infrared lamp. We provided Shrinky Dink sheets and different colors of markers, explained the molecular mechanisms behind folding using heat, and asked participants to predict what shapes would be created from their designs. Members of our team were also interviewed and filmed by media specialists at the Cal Academy for a video on synthetic biology and our iGEM team that will be released soon.
















Subproject Overview

2015 Bay Area Maker Faire
Synthetic biology as part of the Maker Movement

In May 2015, our team held a booth at the 2015 Bay Area Maker Faire. We discussed our team's project ideas, previous Stanford-Brown teams' projects, and synthetic biology as it fits into the Maker movement more broadly. We also led interactive activities such as origami folding and DNA extractions, and had posters with questions such as "If you could make anything with biology, what would you make?" with opportunities to write and draw answers. This was a great opportunity for us to get feedback from the public on our project ideas.


Poster sessions and presentations
Interacting with other researchers

We participated in several poster sessions and gave presentations during the summer to showcase our work and learn about the work of our peers at Stanford, NASA, and other school in Northern California. These events included presentations to the recipients of the Stanford Research Experience for Undergraduates in Bioengineering grants, the summer students at the NASA Advanced Studies Laboratories, and the attendees of the Sierra Systems and Synbio Symposium.

Generic placeholder image

Interviews with Experts
Input and ideas from experts in space missions

When conceptualizing and developing our project, we wanted to make sure that it could fulfill an actual need for NASA's missions. We are grateful to have been able to interview several scientists from NASA, the Rhode Island Space Grant, and Brown University. Four of their interviews were video taped, and are available to watch here. The transcript of these interviews are available here.


Copyright © 2015 Stanford-Brown iGEM Team