User:AgiStachowiak: Difference between revisions

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[[Image:ANS-S12-OWW-pic.JPG|thumb|left|]]  
[[Image:Feliks_molecular-model.JPG|thumb|200px|right|'''my little scientist''']]
Technical Instructor<br>
[[Image:AgiS_BE-site.jpg|thumb|200px|left|'''me''']]  
Former Technical Instructor (Sep07-Dec14)<br>
Department of Biological Engineering<br>
Department of Biological Engineering<br>
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Office: 617.324.1940 (Room 16-319)<br>
Teaching Lab: 617.452.2886 (Room 56-322)<br>


<font color = 990OCC>astachow AT mit DOT edu</font color>
<font color = 990OCC>astachow AT mit DOT edu</font color>
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==Background and Education==
To students who are seeking recommendations, you can still reach me through my MIT email until at least January 2016. After that, I am nickname.lastname at the old gm@il. And on LinkedIn.


Prior to joining the teaching faculty here in Biological Engineering, I was myself educated at MIT for ten years (this is sometimes derisively referred to as being a "lifer"). I first acquired an S.B. in Chemical Engineering (2001), then a Ph.D. in Polymer Science and Engineering under the auspices of the Department of Materials Science and Engineering (2007). My interest in the interface between biology and materials came about late in my undergraduate career, and I was fortunate to pursue this interest at the graduate level in [http://web.mit.edu/biomaterials Darrell Irvine's lab]. In addition to a challenging and engaging research experience, graduate school offered me a chance to hone my teaching (assistant) chops, first in [http://student.mit.edu/@0760803.28299/catalog/search.cgi?search=3.012&style=verbatim 3.012 (thermodynamics)], then in [http://student.mit.edu/@0760803.28299/catalog/search.cgi?search=20.361&style=verbatim 20.361 (biotechnology)]. I have a passion for the written word, whether reading literature or enabling effective and elegant science communication. My greatest interest now is in fostering a science-literate citizenry by multiple tacks: at the college instructor level, this means developing the abilities of students to navigate a large body of information, to understand the logic of experimental design, and to communicate their findings to myriad audiences.
<small>Sneaky [http://333sound.com/2014/05/24/new-33-13-title-phishs-a-live-one shameless plug]</small>


==Core Teaching Values: Goals and Expectations==
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Lessons from [[ANS_109-TAT-year-four-lessons | year four]]<br>
Lessons from [[ANS_109-110-year-three-lessons | year three]]<br>
Lessons from [[ANS_109-year-two-lessons | year two]]<br>
Lessons from [[ANS_109-year-one-lessons | year one]]<br>
 
* Transparency - I would like to convey to you ''why'' you are learning what you are learning at every stage, and also how you will be held accountable for this knowledge. In turn, I expect you to keep me abreast of any bugs or features of the course.
 
* Responsibility - I hope to take the basics (keeping up with classwork, being considerate of your labmates) for granted. Rather, I aspire for us to engage in issues both intrinsic and seemingly peripheral to the course, such as the ethical implications of biotechnology.
 
* Adaptability - No matter what your next career may be, adaptation to unexpected outcomes and the ability to redefine your strategy and goals will be vital. In my own case, flexibility and experimentation with pedagogical methods is a priority. Please do not hesitate to give me feedback.
 
==Teaching History==
 
===Classes===
 
Fall 2007 - Laboratory Fundamentals of Biological Engineering, subject [[20.109(F07) | 20.109]] - instructor <br>
Spring 2008 - subject [[20.109(S08) | 20.109]] - instructor and lecturer<br>
Fall 2008 - subject [[20.109(F08) | 20.109]] - instructor <br>
Spring 2009 - subject [[20.109(S09) | 20.109]] - instructor and lecturer<br>
Fall 2009 - subject [[20.109(F09) | 20.109]] - instructor <br>
Fall 2009 - Thermodynamics of Biomolecular Systems, subject 20.110 - recitation instructor<br>
Spring 2010 - subject [[20.109(S10) | 20.109]] (OpenCourseWare version [http://ocw.mit.edu/courses/biological-engineering/20-109-laboratory-fundamentals-in-biological-engineering-spring-2010/ here]) - instructor and lecturer<br>
Fall 2010 - baby-raising!<br>
Spring 2011 - subject [[20.109(S11) | 20.109]] - instructor and lecturer<br>
 
===Other projects===
 
Summer 2008 &mdash; primary author of departmental guidelines for undergraduate education best practices<br>
Summer 2009, 2010, 2011 &mdash; co-organizer of departmental [[MIT_BE_TA-Training-2011 | TA training (2011 site)]]
 
==Research Interests==
 
1. Biomaterials - especially natural and synthetic polymers. <br>
2. Immunology - particularly T cell motility and lymphoid chemokines. <br>
 
[[ANS_Research-Publications | Publications]]
 
==Current Recommended Reads==
 
*2010 One day in my free time I will review pregnancy and infancy books... <br>
*2009 Spring/Summer [[ANS_2009_Books | here]]
*2008 Year in Review [[ANS_2008_Books | here]]
 
*Winter 2008
**How Doctors Think, by Jerome Groopman [[ANS_Review_Groopman-HDT | (review)]]<br>
**Woman: An Intimate Geography, by Natalie Angier [[ANS_Review_Angiers-Woman | (review)]]
 
*Summer 2007
** Popular science - Endless Forms Most Beautiful, by Sean Carroll<br>
** Fiction - Gilead, by Marilynne Robinson<br>

Latest revision as of 19:55, 23 February 2015

Contact Information

my little scientist
me

Former Technical Instructor (Sep07-Dec14)
Department of Biological Engineering
Massachusetts Institute of Technology

astachow AT mit DOT edu

To students who are seeking recommendations, you can still reach me through my MIT email until at least January 2016. After that, I am nickname.lastname at the old gm@il. And on LinkedIn.

Sneaky shameless plug