Difference between revisions of "Team:Exeter/Engagement"

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                 <h5>Module Aims - Intentions of the module:</h5>
 
                 <h5>Module Aims - Intentions of the module:</h5>
  
                 <h6>ILO - Intended Learning Outcomes</h6>
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                 <h6>ILO - Intended Learning Outcomes:</h6>
  
 
                 <p id="pp"><u>ILO: Module-specific skills</u></p>
 
                 <p id="pp"><u>ILO: Module-specific skills</u></p>
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                 <p id="pp"><u>ILO: Discipline-specific skills</u></p>
 
                 <p id="pp"><u>ILO: Discipline-specific skills</u></p>
  
                <p id="pp">Describe and evaluate approaches to our understanding of synthetic biology with reference to primary literature, reviews and research articles</p>
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              <ul>
                <p id="pp">Describe in some detail essential facts and theory across this sub discipline of the biosciences</p>
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                    <li>Describe and evaluate approaches to our understanding of synthetic biology with reference to primary literature, reviews and research articles</li>
                <p id="pp">Identify critical questions from the literature and synthesise research-informed examples from the literature into written work</p>
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                    <li>Describe in some detail essential facts and theory across this sub-discipline of the biosciences</li>
                <p id="pp">With some guidance, deploy established techniques of analysis and enquiry within the biosciences</p>
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                    <li>Identify critical questions from the literature and synthesise research-informed examples from the literature into written work</li>
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                    <li>With some guidance, deploy established techniques of analysis and enquiry within the biosciences</li>
  
                 <p id="pp"><u>ILO: Personal and key skills</u></p>
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                </ul>
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                 <p id="pp"><u>ILO: Personal and key skills</u></p>
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                <p id="pp">On successfully completing the module you will be able to:</p>
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                <ul>
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                    <li>Communicate ideas, principles and theories fluently by written means in a manner appropriate to the intended audience</li>
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                    <li>Conceive and execute synthetic biology experiments within a scientific framework
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</li>
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                    <li>Collect and interpret appropriate data, drawing on a range of sources, with limited guidance</li>
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                    <li>Develop, with some guidance, a logical and reasoned argument with valid conclusions
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</li>
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                    <li>Work in a small team and deal proficiently with the issues that teamwork requires (i.e. communication, motivation, decision-making, awareness, responsibility, and management skills, including setting and working to deadlines)
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</li>
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                </ul>
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                <h5>Syllabus Plan:</h5>
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                <h6>Journal Club:</h6>
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                <p id="pp">To help students develop their research skills and discover the frontiers of synthetic biology, a journal club will run at the beginning of the course. Groups of students will be given different scientific papers and told to study it over the week using questions given to them to answer about. In seminars, run by post doc researchers who want experience in teaching, students can discuss the paper and the answers to the set questions, helping to develop their skills involving the analysis primary literature in a critical way.</p>
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                <p id="pp"> Students will need to analyse the paper critically and gauge whether it is a successful paper. To aid students with this, certain questions can be set and discussed in seminars with the supervisors, and meetings with other students. These questions might include:</p>
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                <ol>
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                    <li>What is the context and what are the current hypotheses in this field? </li>
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                    <li>Has this paper been cited before? If so, how respectable is the journal?</li>
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                    <li>What is the rationale for the study?</li>
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                    <li>What is the aim of this study? Is it clearly represented/logical and well reasoned?</li>
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                    <li>What are the methods used in this study?</li>
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                    <li>What are the key results and how are they evaluated/analysed?</li>
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                    <li>What conclusions are drawn?</li>
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                    <li>What are the implications for this research? Are there any future challenges?</li>
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                </ol>
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                <p id="pp">This exercise will aid the student with the other papers during this module.</p>
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                <h6>Lectures:</h6>
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                <p id="pp">There will be a lecture series running throughout the module which aims to give the students a more comprehensive understanding of the theory behind synthetic biology as well as opportunities to look further at outside reading around the subjects studied. The students will study:</p>
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                <h6>The Fundamentals of Synthetic Biology</h6>
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                <ul>
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                    <li>Genetics overview/recap e.g. central dogma, mutations, gene splicing, nucleic acids etc</li>
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                    <li>Molecular biology recap</li>
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                    <li>Microbial growth</li>
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                    <li>Fermentation, bioreactors and microbial biotechnology</li>
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                    <li>Factors affecting gene regulation</li>
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                    <li>Circuit design and logic gates</li>
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                    <li>Plasmid design, construction and sequencing and vectors</li>
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                    <li>Biosafety, kill switches and ethics</li>
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                    <li>Biobricks</li>
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                    <li>Cloning strategies</li>
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                    <li>DNA constructs and genome integration</li>
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                    <li>Overview of biological modelling and DOE</li>
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                </ul>
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                <p id="pp">The students will also support this theory with understand of the analytical techniques and practical skills in synthetic biology - which will be looked into further with the practical element of the module. </p>
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                <h6>Practicals - in the latter half of the module:</h6>
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                <p id="pp">Students will be given a list of parts, a selection of BioBricks, which they will later be able to access and told to design a plasmid which includes the gene that codes for the production of a fluorescent protein or biosensor for example. The students will have to research methods of plasmid construction and design an experiment; this uses elements from the journal club and the lecture series. They will then be tasked with constructing this plasmid in small groups (of around 4) in labs and if successful, the protein will be expressed.</p>
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                <h6>Formative Assessment:</h6>
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                <p id="pp">Lecturer and demonstrator feedback during practicals - assessed orally.</p>
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                <h6>Summative Assessment:</h6>
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                <p id="pp">The summative assessment will take the form of a mini iGEM project wherein the students will be assessed on three skills:</p>
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                <ul>
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                    <li>Presentation skills</li>
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                    <li>Written skills</li>
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                    <li>Practical skills</li>
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                </ul>
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                <p id="pp">The students will have to use all they learned through the module, in the journal club, practical and lecture series to help them complete the project. The students will write up the practical project in the form of a short research article, including: abstract, introduction, methods, results and discussion, conclusions and references. They will have to justify why they chose the Biobricks they did as well as show the implications of their findings and relate it to recent studies in the field. Despite having completed the project in groups, this will need to be done individually to avoid collusion and cheating.</p>
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                <p id="pp">The students will then have to present their findings to the rest of the students, judged by academics and industry guests. </p>
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                <p id="pp">The students will also have to create scientific poster and present it at a mini-jamboree.
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The assessment will be broken up thus:</p>
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                <p id="pp">Presentation <strong>- 20%</strong></p>
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                <p id="pp">Poster session <strong>- 20%</strong></p>
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                <p id="pp">Research article <strong>- 60%</strong></p>
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                <h6>Future Aims:</h6>
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                <p id="pp">We aim to implement this module in the September 2017 curriculum for second year biosciences, however in order to do this we need to keep liaising with academics in the Bioscience department and the Director of Education, Dr Mark Ramsdale. We want this module to inspire students to study further synthetic biology in the future, and give those who will apply for the Exeter iGEM team some experience of the competition so there isn’t such a steep learning curve to begin with. We hope this will make the laboratory work more efficient and the bioscience students will be able to teach the students of other disciplines more easily, having been taught themselves by post doc researchers and potentially previous iGEM team members. </p>
  
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Desert Island... Science?
 
Desert Island... Science?

Revision as of 14:14, 10 October 2016