I'm interested in synthetic biology, and feel like I would probably pursue it later in life, in college most likely (major in BioEng, probably).
On Saturday, April 14, 2012 1:35:35 AM UTC-7, MattP wrote:I'm interested in synthetic biology, and feel like I would probably pursue it later in life, in college most likely (major in BioEng, probably).
Start by dropping out of high school and going straight to college.
--
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "DIYbio" group.
To view this discussion on the web visit https://groups.google.com/d/msg/diybio/-/XT6S62OWAqgJ.
To post to this group, send email to diy...@googlegroups.com.
To unsubscribe from this group, send email to diybio+un...@googlegroups.com.
For more options, visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/diybio?hl=en.
so many of my peers (I'm almost done with B.S. in biotech) suck at
sterile technique its a joke. Same goes for lab safety, you gotta stay
safe, and keep your cultures safe from other living things. I started
learning this stuff exactly this way starting when I was 15... and I
can cut corners like a pro compared to my peers, who don't understand
the lab techniques, rather they just read step by step, not seeing
what the ultimate goal is. (10 people can cook fried chicken in 10
different ways, but as long as it tastes good in the end, its
considered a success.... people who have to read step by step a
chicken recipe and don't know what things they can tweak, often are
pretty far behind in knowing how to cook well)
> --
> You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups
> "DIYbio" group.
> To view this discussion on the web visit
> https://groups.google.com/d/msg/diybio/-/_MzGTyZvIU0J.
> To post to this group, send email to diy...@googlegroups.com.
> To unsubscribe from this group, send email to
> diybio+un...@googlegroups.com.
> For more options, visit this group at
> http://groups.google.com/group/diybio?hl=en.
--
Nathan McCorkle
Rochester Institute of Technology
College of Science, Biotechnology/Bioinformatics
High school provides me with a relatively well rounded education
In the end it's a different story for everyone. Some people glorify the self-made dropout, others the avid knowledge seeker, others the social didact.
I think Mad Casual has offered the best advice here: just go and grow something. Hands on learning is crucial here, often a concept it's hard to grasp until you can put it in perspective through the lens of experience.
Easiest starting project to acquire and try is probably isolating pure cultures. Yoghurt, kombucha, sourdough and other mixed cultures also offer great experience potential for learning about separation of cultures etc.
MattP <gink...@gmail.com> wrote:
>--
>You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google
>Groups "DIYbio" group.
>To view this discussion on the web visit
>https://groups.google.com/d/msg/diybio/-/RwFFj6V6FAoJ.
>To post to this group, send email to diy...@googlegroups.com.
>To unsubscribe from this group, send email to
>diybio+un...@googlegroups.com.
>For more options, visit this group at
>http://groups.google.com/group/diybio?hl=en.
--
Sent from K-9 Mail on Android
In the end it's a different story for everyone. Some people glorify the self-made dropout, others the avid knowledge seeker, others the social didact.
I think Mad Casual has offered the best advice here: just go and grow something. Hands on learning is crucial here, often a concept it's hard to grasp until you can put it in perspective through the lens of experience.
Easiest starting project to acquire and try is probably isolating pure cultures. Yoghurt, kombucha, sourdough and other mixed cultures also offer great experience potential for learning about separation of cultures etc.
MattP <gink...@gmail.com> wrote:
> For more options, visit this group at
> http://groups.google.com/group/diybio?hl=en.
Mad, is that a riddle or trick question?
To view this discussion on the web visit https://groups.google.com/d/msg/diybio/-/h4Cop5szwgcJ.
To post to this group, send email to diy...@googlegroups.com.
To unsubscribe from this group, send email to diybio+un...@googlegroups.com.
:P
--
I'm interested in synthetic biology, and feel like I would probably pursue it later in life, in college most likely (major in BioEng, probably). However, is there anything I can do now? I thought about starting an iGEM HS team, but the school doesn't really have the infrastructure and there's probably not enough interest. What do you think would be the best thing to do to sort of get up to speed, and what kind of projects should I possibly look into. I have experience from robotics, so actually building equipment (gel boxes, light bulb PCR, etc) would be a possibility, but other than that, what sort of things are possible? Also, what would a basic lab setup require?
--
>For more options, visit this group at
>http://groups.google.com/group/diybio?hl=en.
I'm thinking of how to make minimal liquid handler cheaply by using a turntable as part of the motion
that is controlled and at most 2 other linear position controllers. That could be combined with
incubation to get an automatic culture-minder that "just outflows" milliliters of cultured bugs and asks
for them to be taken to the fridge by alarm clock sounds or maybe internet-toaster-like email messages.
That will have some kind of modular case so later, it can be easily attached to a mini peltier
fridge that is also built as a small lab module. Then it will just quietly fill the fridge with grown bugs
while you do other things.
John
I remember about 20 words from German-themed 4th and 5th grade (which
I wasn't enrolled in, but they lacked space in other classes), about 2
sentences from Latin in middle school, how to say my name and a few
numbers from middle school French, and pretty much nothing but a
'joke' I made in high school Italian (la chiesa en la piazza... "the
cheese is on the pizza!" I exclaimed picking my head up from dozing on
my desk... "no, the church is in the plaza" *embarrassed, goes back to
sleep*)
I also remember my 7th grade science teacher dismissing plasma as the
4th state of matter, she was most likely fresh outta B.S. or M.S. in
teaching... I failed to be a very good student in her class after
that. Ridiculous I thought, how did they let this girl in here?
My tech shop class in middle school was sweet though, we got to use
lathes and bandsaws I think, I built a balsa wood truss bridge of my
own design and used a loading device to find the load at which it
started cracking and breaking. A robotics competition came to the
school, and quickly I was skipping everything from english, lunch,
art, and gym class to tweak with Lego Mindstorms and an MIT Handyboard
(my first foray into C, though I had known some BASIC thanks to the
DOS game Gorillas) Why the hell would I go to gym, or lunch, when I
could make things happen, create things. I put more work into those
robots than any other single student, and we won the regionals against
other middle and high schools, and got sent to Seattle for free to
compete in the nationals (where we had Windows 98 fail on us,
inhibiting us from doing much coding after we left home).
Fast forward to the end of highschool, where administrators finally
got sick of my lifelong career of often missing the first few hours of
school (because I was up late, reading stuff, that also wasn't
necessarily homework), and wanted me to repeat 11th grade. I had
already taken Community College computer courses by that time, two or
three in fact, been to a summer of CMU robot camp (middle school era),
and was enrolled in the Community College that year as well, in at
least a Java course. I dropped out in the summer, took GED and scored
in 99th %ile, took SAT and bio subject test, got something like a 1280
out of 1400 or 1600 (can't remember, that was some 8 years ago now)...
and in the Fall I was enrolled full-time at the Community college in
business and horticulture classes (my dad wanted me to take the biz
classes, so I obliged, and he had been taking hort classes and was
already into bio). I ended up dropping the biz classes because, well,
they sucked since I wasn't really interested too much in biz.
Worked construction for a few months with my dad, then got an free
trip to do trail work for a month in Idaho with the SCA (student
conservation association), which lead me to getting an AmeriCorps
position in SoCal's Mojave desert working on BLM lands. Screwed around
on a ranch outside L.A. laboring and painting movie sets for a while
after that, and took a TEFL certification class (teaching english as a
foreign language) with plans to go live in Nepal for 6 months. Got to
Nepal, hiked for a month in the Himalayas, seeing men with chicken
coops and fuel tanks strapped to their backs, being the FedEx of the
mountains, and realized people (like Elian Gonzalez's mom) die for a
chance to get into the U.S. for opportunity... and that staying an
unpaid english teacher in Nepal could be like throwing that
opportunity away.
After getting back to L.A. I wasn't sure where to go, until I started
counting how many cents I was getting paid for each shovel full of
dirt I was shuttling out of a collapsed water tank. I had been reading
a lot about algae for biofuels, and as luck had it I moved back east
because my father's heart attack called me to his bedside. Depressed
and unsure, I scoured loads of college websites, and visited two that
I had friends attending. I happened upon a professor's Innovation and
Invention class while checking out the RIT campus, and a week later
when I was heading back from Vermont past RIT, stopped and saw him
again. He liked me so much he paid me cash that day for computer work,
and offered me a paid research position if I was accepted into RIT.
Got into RIT no problem, probably thanks to him in a good way.
If I hadn't skipped all those gym classes, and english classes, and
art classes... if I wouldn't have thrown my school years down the
drain by staying up late hacking linux and reading internet forums
about programming languages, and all the late nights when I would hide
under the blanket until well past my bedtime with a flashlight reading
science and invention encyclopedias... I probably wouldn't have got
into college. If I had simply followed the rules, dealt with the
stress and conformed, I probably would be a really lame and boring sad
person today. Not conforming wasn't easy either though, to most people
that's a bad thing, and its true that from outside my family I
probably seemed no different than the rest of the screw-ups who are
now working their way up the McDonalds corporate ladder.
If I can say one thing from all of this, its that you have to trust
you instinct.
If learning how to read stresses the hell out of you, like practicing
math for a math class does to me, so be it, accept the label of
dyslexic... but don't push yourself to read if you can see and
understand intuitively how to craft and machine wood and metals. Most
people who know how to read can't swing a hammer square on a nail if
their life depended on it. Most people can't even change a flat car
tire.
That said, you've also got to be pragmatic... you should at least
learn how to read and write numbers, you don't want to get ripped off
paying $10 for a bottle of milk. You also don't want to be the guy
stuck working for the local tow truck service, changing an endless
number of tires for dumb people, working 80 hours a week to feed a
girlfriend and her two kids.
This philosophy/idealism certainly won't work for all people, but I do
think inventors and scientists of the olden days, when a single guy
can come up with something cool and novel, are by no means over.
Corporate way of life is NOT the only way of life, people in other
countries live on $2 a day and in my opinion are probably doing better
nutrition-wise than a significant portion of Americans.
Welcome to the Real World, MattP... if school doesn't stress you out,
awesome, you're here hanging out with me because you must have some
curiosity, some desire to discover, the urge to ask questions. I think
most of people can't stand being probed intellectually, can't stand to
hear another "why?" question, because I think most people just don't
think that deep.
Welcome to a group of people that love to ask "why?", keep coming back.
P.S. I'm about a month shy of finishing a degree in Biotech
concentrating in Bioinformatics, college structure sucks as much as
the rest of my school career, but overall the stress that I get from
it is definitely far outweighed by the amount of knowledge and
learning I've had access to. The DIYbio group has been my college peer
group, because frankly most of my peers are going to end up in a
really boring lab tech (bottle washer) or quality control (doing the
repetitive work of robots) job, because they don't have passion,
drive, focus, or whatever the hell the rant I just spewed out
describes.
> --
> You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups
> "DIYbio" group.
> To view this discussion on the web visit
> https://groups.google.com/d/msg/diybio/-/se5ODgYsIEcJ.
>
> To post to this group, send email to diy...@googlegroups.com.
> To unsubscribe from this group, send email to
> diybio+un...@googlegroups.com.
> For more options, visit this group at
> http://groups.google.com/group/diybio?hl=en.
--