Page 17 - Focus March 2018
P. 17

High school students are getting a unique, hands-on experience in gene editing in an innovative program developed at the
Gene Editing Institute at Christiana Care’s Helen F. Graham Cancer Center & Research Institute.
The program expands on a National Science Foundation grant in which the Gene Editing Institute partners with Delaware Technical Community College to provide curriculum to educate future research lab workers. It’s believed to be the first time an NSF grant has been used to educate students on a high school level, with the potential to expand to schools across the nation.
“When we first envisioned this, we thought Delaware’s high school system would be an excellent place to roll this out,” said Eric Kmiec, Ph.D., director of the Gene Editing Institute. “The topic is so hot and so relevant.”
The first students to participate are from Wilmington Friends and The Tatnall School, who came with their teachers to the Helen F. Graham Cancer Center.
Nicholas J. Petrelli, M.D., Bank of America endowed medical director of the Graham Cancer Center, welcomed the students.
Dr. Kmiec lectured to Friends students, while Natalia Rivera-Torres, pre-doctoral scholar, addressed Tatnall students the following week. Students then were introduced to the gene editing protocol
Sbefore a tour of the lab.
tudents took the necessary materials back to their school labs, which they will use to manipulate genes in yeast cells, turning them from white to red using CRISPR, a gene-editing tool.
“The students were ecstatic,” said Hailey Weiner, business development coordinator at the Gene Editing Institute. “It was very inspiring.”
Ellen Johnson, who leads the science program at Friends, said stu- dents benefited from the opportunity to interact with researchers, technicians and students who are actively engaged in gene editing.
“We have the best of two worlds, as the students have been lucky
to see and hear first-hand some of what is being accomplished at the Gene Editing Institute, and they will be following up on the field trip experience by working with the yeast model system in our biology lab at Wilmington Friends,” she said.
Sharon Kreamer, science department head
at Tatnall, said experiences outside the classroom are invaluable for students. “They allow students to see the real-world, practical application of what they are learning in their STEM classes and get a glimpse into what careers in science really look like,” she said.
Eric Kmiec, Ph.D., director of the Gene Editing Institute, teaches a gene-editing class for visiting high school students at the Helen F. Graham Cancer Center & Research Institute.
Ally Kong,
an Advanced
Placement
biology
student, will
be using the curriculum as her independent study during her final semester at Tatnall and will be leading the course for her fellow classmates. “We all are so excited to have the opportunity to perform the CRISPR yeast lab at school,” she said.
Timothy Arnold, a senior at Friends, is intrigued by the possibili- ties gene editing offers in increasing the world’s food supply while preserving the environment. “I’m really interested in conservation biology, and I know that by creating more efficient crops, we can reduce the amount of land that we take up and increase the amount of natural habitat we have for endangered species,” he said.
Tony Bennett, a Friends senior, plans to study biology in college to prepare for a career in research. He believes the program gives him a head start on his studies. “I expect that I’ll be working with CRISPR, or I’ll have classmates or professors that work with CRISPR, so I’ll be maybe at the forefront of this technology as I continue my education,” he said.
More students will have that opportunity as the program expands, Dr. Kmiec said. “Gene editing and this platform technology is
an exciting research tool many of these students will be using
in college,” he said. “Delaware students will do better by being prepared with the latest technology.”
T
cility and finally, education. The center receives requests
he Gene Editing Institute’s missions include translational research and technology development, partnerships and commercialization, genome customization as a core fa-
for curriculum and kits from schools across the country and is currently developing two additional gene editing curriculums.
Plans are to partner with Del Tech to host future programs for high school students. 
| Cancer Care
FOCUS • MARCH 2018 15
LEARN
MORE ABOUT GENE EDITING at https://christianac are.org/ geneeditinginstitute


































































































   15   16   17   18   19