Our team this year could not have achieved what we have without the help and support of the fantastic people around us. We would like to thank everybody for their patience and assistance with our project this year no matter how influential their contribution.
Professor John Love: Associate Professor in Plant & Industrial Biotechnology and our lead iGEM coordinator. He provided us with some much needed advice throughout the project both within the lab and on many aspects of our Human Practices.
Dr Paul James: Research Fellow and our first point of call for anything iGEM related. From helping us in the initial planning of our project to aiding us with our module design, lab techniques and modelling, Dr James has been incredibly influential in all aspects of our project.
Dr Chloe Singleton: Research Fellow and main point of call within the lab. Dr Singleton was their to assist us on any and all lab techniques and protocols. She also provided further advice on various science outreach projects and other queries we had during the summer.
Jamie Gilman: PhD student and main supervisor for the first few weeks of the summer. We would like to thank Jamie for his patience with us in the lab and taking time out of his own research to help us understand and carry out the protocols.
Ryan Edginton: PHD student and point of call for anything physics or modelling related. Ryan was particularly helpful for advice on biological modelling and with his experience of iGEM, he helped us with time management and wiki construction.
Dagmara Kolak: Laboratory Manager. We would like to thank Dagmara for her guidance on good lab practice to ensure our experiments were designed and carried out in a safe way.
Dr Anya Nenniger: Research fellow. Anja was particularly helpful with primer design, guidance on genome integration and ensuring the lab work was done in an efficient manner.
Everyone else in the Mezzanine lab: Thank you very much for letting us take over your lab for the summer, we hope we didn’t cause you all too much stress!
There were various people who helped us and gave us advice on creating a synthetic biology module for second years. Thank you to Dr Mark Ramsdale, Dr Caitlin Kight and Dr Nicky King for advice in the initial planning stages of the module and further to Dr Paul James and Professor John Love for championing our module at later stages to ensure we have the best possible chance of getting it implemented. A special thanks to all the lecturers we met and frightened by proposing they become module coordinator for the module!
As the board game was the longest running project, there are many people we need to thank. First of all to Ms Hayley Andrews and those at The Judd School who allowed us to test the first prototype of our board game, and later for her advice about getting it distributed to schools across the UK. We also want to thank all those who helped us design and make the initial and later prototypes of the board game and to Damien Riddle of Edexcel, who gave us backing to create a Stretch and Challenge tool for students and teachers. Dr Mark Ramsdale deserves a big thank you as he provided us with the funds necessary to print off board games and cards for widening participation activities. Dr Alice Mills was essential, both in the early stages and the late in helping us find schools to test our board game in. Dr Caitlin Kight also provided some good advice on how best to distribute the board game and ways we could make it more accessible. On the same note, we would like to thank all those who came up with brilliant ideas on improving our board game design and implementation, like Dr Sara Burton. We are especially grateful of Colyton Grammar School for agreeing to have us for a less and testing the latest version of BioMech as well as Tyrone Middle School in Florida.
We would like to thank all the people - academics, researchers and public figures - who were interviewed or recorded Desert Island Science podcasts with us; we wouldn’t have had a public engagement human practices without you. Dr Caitlin Kight, Ben May, Duncan Sandes, Grace Williams have all been influential at one point in improving our interaction with the public and students, especially Ben May in helping set up a separate web page for our project, specifically looking at the equality and diversity work. This allowed our message and work to be shared by the university and various social media accounts. Dr Sara Burton has also given us very useful advice on how to engage more with the public. We would like to thank Dr Nicky King for allowing us to attend the two science fairs. We would also like to thank the three work experience students who helped develop our project, both in Human Practices and in the Lab.
We are very grateful that Dr Andrew Griffiths, Dr Eduarda Santos, Dr Ceri Lewis, Dr Sharon Dixon, Dr Rob Wilson and Professor Michelle Ryan could take time for us to interview them on equality and diversity. Without these interviews and experiences shared, we wouldn’t have had most of our equality and diversity work and we wouldn’t have been able to develop our own views on equality and diversity. The Athena Swan Group and the Equality, Diversity and Inclusivity group at the university gave us the statistics necessary to back up the accounts given by the academics we interviewed. We would like to thank all those involved in helping us, especially those at XTV and Xpression FM for helping to host the equality and diversity in science panel discussion.
We are very grateful of the insight and feedback from Marcus Geshater, Dr Tom Ellis, Dr Steve Michell and Professor Richard Titball, allowing us to change and adapt our lab work according to its potential use in academic research or industry.