20.109(F14): Assignments

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20.109(F14): Laboratory Fundamentals of Biological Engineering

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DNA Engineering        System Engineering        Biomaterials Engineering              

Overview

You will perform three series of experiments (hereafter “modules”) over the course of the semester. The modules differ in both conceptual and technical content, and in the ways that your learning will be assessed. Links to the experiments and assignments are provided below.

Although your lab work will be done in pairs, most assignments will be submitted individually (as summarized below) and should reflect your personal understanding. Please read the 20.109 statement on collaboration and integrity for more detail about academic honesty in our class. You are encouraged to ask the teaching faculty any questions you have about what constitutes appropriate collaboration.

  • Individual assignments (60% of grade): all lab notebooks, quizzes, and homeworks (unless otherwise noted in directions); Module 1 methods section; Module 2 research article and journal club presentation.
  • Team assignments (40% of grade): Module 1 abstract and data summary (draft and revision), Module 3 data summary, and Module 3 research proposal.

We appreciate that time management can be a difficult skill to develop, and that learning takes place on many time-scales. However, assignments turned in at wildly disparate times create additional logistical burdens for the teaching faculty. Therefore, late work (both daily and culminating assignments) will be penalized 1/3 of a letter grade for each day late and will not be accepted after a week. We strongly recommend that you plan ahead and space out your work when possible. For assignments that may be revised, be sure to read the late policy clarification in the assignment descriptions.

We will endeavor to provide equal access to subject 20.109 for students with disabilities, in accordance with the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) of 1990. Please see the teaching faculty as soon as possible regarding needed accommodations.

Major Assignments

Most major assignments will be submitted to the Stellar drop box for our class.

Module Topic Assignment % of Final Grade Details Due Date
1 DNA Engineering Plasmid construction methods section 5 Assignment description Mon, Oct 6th, 5pm
Abstract and data summary 15 Assignment description Fri/Sat, Oct 10/11, 5pm
2 System Engineering Research article 25 Assignment description Wed, Nov 12th, noon
Journal club presentation 10 Assignment description M2D4 or M2D8
3 Biomaterial Engineering Mini report 5 Assignment description Thur/Fri, Dec 4/5
Research idea presentation 20 Assignment description
Evaluation rubric (PDF download)
Tue/Wed, Dec 9/10

Daily Work

In addition to the assignments listed above you will complete

  • Laboratory Notebooks (5% of final grade)
    • You will record your data in electronic notebooks. Your Evernote pages will be evaluated by the teaching assistants once per module.
    • Notebook due dates and evaluation criteria are described here.
  • Weekly Lab Quizzes (5% of final grade)
    • About once a week you will take a short (10 min) quiz; quizzes are worth 10 pts each.
    • Quizzes have two main purposes: (1) To refresh your memory about the long-term experiment you are performing, and (2) To provide you with an opportunity to show your technical knowledge decoupled from your communication skills.
    • Quizzes are based on the previous lab session(s): both lecture and lab content are fair game. Questions will concern fundamentals rather than details. For example, you might be asked to interpret a piece of data, define a major concept, or perform a short calculation.
    • Quiz dates are: M1D1, M1D3, M1D4, M1D6, M2D2, M2D4, M2D8, M3D2, M3D4, and M3D5 .
  • Homework Assignments (7% of final grade)
    • Like quizzes, homeworks are intended to keep you up to date with the material. Most of them will directly prepare you for major assessments (e.g., making a draft figure for a lab report) or lab work (e.g., performing a calculation in advance). Associated points/weighting will vary widely.
    • The homeworks can be found in the "for next week" (FNW) section of each lab day as well as linked from the class Google calendar. (Coming soon!)
    • Assignments should be submitted as hardcopies at the beginning of lab. A select few assignments must also be submitted on Stellar in order to receive feedback from the writing instructors and are marked as such.
    • You can work with your lab partner, friends, and teaching assistants on the FNWs but you will hand in individual assignments unless otherwise specified.
  • Participation and Blogging (3% of final grade)
    • As a student in 20.109, you are expected to be an active participant in a scientific community. Your student colleagues, the teaching faculty, and especially your lab partner are all your collaborators. They rely on you for timely posting of your data, and for your unique and thoughtful contributions during class.
    • One-third of your participation grade will be directly assigned by the teaching faculty, who will consider: whether you asked and/or answered questions during lecture, whether you engaged with opportunities to improve your understanding/communication/etc., and whether you promoted a considerate and collaborative class environment.
    • To determine the other two-thirds of your participation grade, you will write brief reflective blog posts on a few aspects of your 20.109 experience throughout the semester at the 20.109 Class Blog. These blog posts are assigned to provide you practice writing for an open online community and will be counted separately from other homework. Considering all of the miscommunicated science we see in the media, it is important to learn how to effectively communicate your thoughts about both good and not-so-good aspects of your scientific experience. You must complete at least 4 and no more than 7 blog posts. The due date schedule and further explanation of both mandatory and optional reflective posts is linked here.

Communication Guidelines and Resources

This part of the page is way more important than it looks! Time and time again, students have told us that they wish they had read these guidelines sooner, and that it would have made their early efforts more productive. We understand that it can be difficult to apply abstract ideas to your writing (and presentation) practice right off the bat. So besides reading these guidelines now, revisit them often as you start to draft parts of your reports and presentations.

This semester you'll also have access to communications-specific assistance from dedicated Writing Across the Curriculum (WAC) faculty. Writing instructors will provide written feedback on a select few draft assignments during Modules 1 and 2. They'll also provide formal instruction on the requirements of a lab report. Finally, they are available for office hours by appointment. For oral presentation assistance, you will hear a lecture from and meet individually with Atissa Banuazizi.

Guidelines for writing up your research

  • General instruction for how to write your lab report and research article.

Guidelines for oral presentations

  • How to give a good oral presentation.

And in case you missed these links above, see also

Guidelines for maintaining your lab notebook

  • How to maintain a good lab notebook.

Statement on collaboration and integrity

  • Academic integrity guidelines specific to 20.109.