Resources
For teachers

Bioethics Essay

Do the potential contributions to society warrant the potential risks inherent in synthetic biology?

Synthetic biology has emerged only recently as an engineering discipline. At this point, the field has more potential than accomplishment. Some people see an incredible potential that includes cures for diseases, biosynthetic fuels and houses that are grown from gourds. Other people question the safety of a process that involves altering genomes.

Students are asked to investigate the question:
Do the potential contributions to society warrant the potential risks inherent in synthetic biology?

WHY TEACH THIS?

Here are some reasons from our BioBuilder teachers:

  • Practical application of synthetic biology
  • Introduction to basic engineering principles
  • Emphasis on engineering “design/build/test” paradigms
  • Collecting and analyzing qualitative and quantitative data
  • Determining the need for various types of data
  • Emphasizing team work and collaboration
  • Learning and implementing basic lab skills
  • Learning current and relevant science
  • High interest
  • Non-predictable outcomes
  • Emphasizes creative portion of science
  • Meets NGSS and Common Core
  • Adaptable on the inquiry spectrum
  • Live examples of operons and gene expression
  • Exposure to population growth curves

WHERE DOES THIS ACTIVITY FIT IN?

  • The BioBuilder curriculum is intentionally flexible and the activities may be used when and where appropriate based upon student content and skill readiness.
  • The curriculum is also intentionally modular. You can teach one or more BioBuilder activities, and they do not have to be completed in order.
  • The BioBuilder curriculum is not intended to stuff “more” content into some already overstuffed classes. It can be used to teach ideas and content that are traditionally taught, applying an engineering framework to teach them with investigative, design questions.
  • Finally the curriculum is not exclusively intended for one specific life science course. BioBuilder has been used in General or Honors Biology (with high school freshman), in AP Biology and in Biotechnology classes (with high school juniors and seniors), and in college engineering or microbiology lab classes. Middle school students also have had wonderful success with the BioBuilder Jr labs.
SOME BACKGROUND CONTENT AND SKILLS ARE HELPFUL PRIOR TO CONDUCTING LABS.

Content

  • DNA Basics: what it is and how it works
  • RNA Basics: what it is and how it works
  • Gene Expression: Transcription, Translation, Operons
  • Recombinant DNA: Restriction enzymes, cloning, selection with antibiotic resistance

Skills

  • Pipetting
  • Measuring cell density with a spectrophotometer
  • Basic microbiology skills: Culturing bacteria, Aseptic technique, Antibiotic resistance, Population dynamics

RESOURCES AND DOWNLOADS

Specific materials for teaching this lab

CLASSROOM RESOURCES

Alignment to Standards

ANALYSIS AND FEEDBACK

Assessment Rubrics

Grading Rubric for the Bioethics Essay

Post-Lab Assessment

Help us gauge the understanding and interest that your students have after their BioBuilder activities by participating in a 20 question survey. Student responses will only be reported in aggregate and analyzed for statistically significant trends. We’d be grateful if you could administer this post-assessment only once, after you’ve carried out all the BioBuilder activities you’ll run with your class. THANK YOU!