Team:William and Mary/Human Practices/Established Women Supporting STEM

Women's Weekend

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William & Mary is celebrating 100 years of women and co-education on campus. This meant our team had the unique opportunity to connect with alumni from a diverse array of fields to share our research. We wanted to excite an older generation of women who did not have a background in bioengineering, and encourage them to stay involved with synthetic biology research.
Evaluating Interest & Understanding
Our women alumni came from diverse backgrounds, and we moved forward with the assumption that all attendees had at least a highschool/intro level understanding of biology. For women without a background in biology we were able to generate excitement for our project by describing potential applications of our work. Several of the alumni who spoke with us had backgrounds in biology due to bachelors or master degrees in biology. However, as SynBio is such a recent field, even those with biology background had not encountered some of the bioengineering concepts we used. These women with stronger science backgrounds were excited to hear about the techniques we used in wet lab, especially 3G assembly. Because we were able to adapt our poster presentation for each small group of women we excited many women from a wide variety of backgrounds.
Consider How to Connect
Because SynBio was new to many of these women, we needed to focus on introducing the field to them rather than explaining the details of our project in depth. Our goal wasn’t to teach them the science of 3G assembly as much as introduce the concept of inserting DNA into a bacterium genome. We needed to emphasize the wide range of applications of SynBio, and get the women interested in the field.
Implementation
On September 21st, William and Mary hosted a poster presentation as part of the school’s “Women Weekend.” Our team presented our iGEM project, and had the honor of talking extensively approximately 20 of the over 100 attendees. All 100 attendees were able to review our poster during the walking dinner provided. As the attendees stopped by our poster, we would explain our project in the detail that best fit the attendee. Many of the women did not have an extensive biology background, and thus we focused heavily on applications of both our project and the field of SynBio. On the other hand, one woman we talked to had a PhD in biology, and was able to ask perceptive and astute questions regarding our project. She was amazed by how far techniques in biology have progressed.
Reflect & Record
The event was a fantastic experience for the team and the alumni alike. Many of the women were blown away by what our lab was able to accomplish, and several of them expressed how proud they were of their alma mater. While the women we talked to were very enthusiastic about our project, many of them were not particularly interested in the details of the science. Rather than confuse them with unnecessary information, we boiled our project into a few short, easily understandable sentences, and spent most of the time on applications of the project in various fields including medicine and conservation biology.