Registration Handbook

This page is under active development and is in draft form. Nothing posted here is finalized.

iGEM Registration Handbook: user accounts

The first step in the entire iGEM registration process is to create a user account for yourself. Everyone must have a user account - instructors, students, graduate students, other faculty, and anyone else on the team. In order to be on a team, you must have a user account. By creating this account, you will be able to access and edit the content on the iGEM website and wiki, and the Registry website and wiki. You will also be able to use any tools on either of those two websites. It is extremely important that you have a user account!

In order to create an account, go to the create an account page by clicking on "Log in/create an account" in the upper right corner. It will look like this:

The most important thing to remember when creating a user account is that we are asking you to provide us TWO names: your real name and your user name. Your user name will only be used to log in to iGEM and the Registry. Your real name will be used for everything else - including keeping track of edits that you make, attributing credit to anything that you have done, and any other presence that you have on iGEM and the Registry. Your user name is simply your login name and your real name is your professional identity. Your user/login name can be anything that you want but your real name must take the form [first name] [last name]. At this time, we can only accept character A-Z and numbers 0-9. We unfortunately cannot accept any special characters yet. We realize that this might pose an inconvenience to some but please be aware that we are working towards having full character support at some point in the near future.

When you create an account you will be asked for the school or organization you are affiliated with. This is NOT the name of the iGEM team you are on. This is the school that you attend or the organization that you are with. For example, if Boston College and Cambridge College were to join together to form an iGEM team called Massachusetts, a student at Boston College would write that their school is Boston College, NOT Massachusetts.

Once you have created a user account, you automatically have a user page.

If you ever forget your user name or your password, you can come back to the login page. You can look up your user name by searching with your real name. If you forget your password, you can enter your user name and a new password can be emailed to you.

iGEM Registration Handbook: team accounts

In order to participate in iGEM, you must first apply for and then register your team. You must be a faculty instructor to do so - students members will not be allowed to register a team.

If you are an instructor, keep reading these instructions. If you are a student, you can continue reading but please be sure to read the section below called iGEM team: registration/roster.

iGEM team: name

There a few things to remember before registering a team. First, and most important, is the team name. In most cases the team name will be the name of the city (or school in some cases) from which you are participating. It must:

  • be LESS THAN 20 characters
  • only contain letters A-Z
  • can contain underscore (_) or hyphen (-)
  • not contain spaces
  • not include the words iGEM, team, or synthetic biology (e.g. the Cambridge Boston iGEM team name should be Cambridge_Boston or the Massachusetts iGEM team should be just Massachusetts)
  • This is your formal team name that will be read by both people and computers so it must be simple and descriptive. The team name should be reflective of a team's school and/or location. Please do not include other information, such as school mascots.

    iGEM team: composition

    There are different roles on an iGEM team- instructors, primary principal investigator, students, and some auxiliary roles. There must be at least two instructors. One of these instructors MUST be a faculty member or staff and the other may be a grad student/post doc if the team wishes. For high school teams, one of the instructors must be a high school teacher.

    The role of the instructors is primarily an educational one. They are there for support in the following, but of course not limited to, helping with laboratory technique, computational technique, funding, lab space, etc. One of the instructors will be the primary principal investigator for the team, and the other instructor will be the secondary principal investigator. Both instructors will serve as the main contacts whom we will get in touch with if we need to speak with someone from the team. They will also be responsible for paying all of the fees associated with being an iGEM team. It is very important that you provide your contact information, both email address, and telephone number.

    In addition to the instructors, there are, of course, the students. To allow more individuals from different educational levels to participate in iGEM, there are now two sections in the competition. Teams are either undergraduate teams or overgraduate teams depending on the ages of their student team members. * '''Undergraduate teams''' have student team members who are 23 or younger as of March 31, 2016. ** On these teams, team members who are older than 23 can serve as instructors or advisors. * '''Overgraduate teams''' have student team members who are older than 23 as of March 31, 2016. In both the undergraduate section and the overgraduate section, the student team members must be the ones actually doing the majority of the labwork. Any work not done by iGEM student team members must be clearly attributed to whomever conducted the work and this will be taken into consideration during judging.

    In addition to team instructors and students, there are some auxiliary roles on an iGEM team. These could be sponsors, part time support from other professors, industry liaisons, etc.

    Lastly, an iGEM team does not have to have just one school being represented. A team can be comprised of members from one or more schools. In addition, one school can have more than one iGEM team. It is not unusual for a school to have both a traditional wetlab iGEM team as well as a software tools/entrepreneurship team.

    iGEM team: application

    As indicated above, only faculty instructors can apply for and register an iGEM team. To do so, you should have already obtained a user account. If you have not already done so, please return to the create an account page.

    Once you are logged in with your user name, go to the iGEM Team Application page and you can begin applying for your team. You will need to have the following information:

    • team name (see requirements above)
    • shipping information (to receive your DNA distribution)
    • primary instructor information (email address, phone number)
    • secondary instructor information (email address, phone number)
    • primary student contact information (email address, phone number) -- optional
    • resource description details (including faculty/instructor names, laboratory space information, team composition (if available), financial resources information)

    Once you have filled in all the necessary information, you can submit your application. Note that this is an application - your information will be sent to iGEM Headquarters (HQ) and we will review it and either accept it or contact you for more details. This is a manual process, not automatic, so it may take a day or two! We will be as efficient as possible when it comes to accepting iGEM team applications.

    iGEM team: regions

    The region (Asia, Europe, Latin America, North America) that your team will be participating in will be automatically selected based on the address information entered when completing the team application.

    However, please note that in 2016 there are no Regional Jamborees; all teams will be competing at the 2016 Giant Jamboree.

    iGEM team: registration/roster

    As soon as your team application is approved by iGEM HQ, you will be on the list to receive the Spring 2016 DNA Distribution Kit and you will be able to start to form your team roster.

    The team roster can be built up in three ways:

    1. The primary principal investigator of the team will receive a team registration code that they can provide to students on the team. The students can then create a user account and at that point, join the already existing team and add themselves to the team roster.
    2. When team members create their user accounts, they will be able to join an existing iGEM team by request. Once they complete their user account setup, they will have a user account but it will be up to the instructors to accept their membership on the team. Instructors will be able to do this by going to the Team Information page.
    3. The primary principal investigator of the team will also be able to add team members to the team roster by inputting their user names into the Team Information page. For this, the team members must have already created their own user accounts. This last method of adding team members is probably not the easiest way since you will be faced with a pull down list of all user names, so we would suggest adding members via one of the first two methods.

    To view your team roster, go to the iGEM 2016 Main Page, and click on the list icon in the upper right corner to view the drop-down navigation menu. Click on "2016 Teams" to view the complete list of teams, and then click on your team name.