Delaware Tech CC Lands $1 Million to Develop Gene Editing Curriculum
        
        
        
        Community college students in Delaware will soon have the opportunity  to learn about gene editing thanks to a $1 million advanced  technological education grant from the National  Science Foundation (NSF).
Awarded jointly to the Delaware  Technical Community College and the Gene  Editing Institute of Christiana  Care's Helen F. Graham Cancer Center and Research Institute, the grant is  designed to support the development of a gene editing curriculum for students  in community colleges.
John McDowell, biology and biotechnology teacher at Delaware Tech, and Eric  Kmiec, director of the Gene Editing Institute, are lead investigators on the  grant.
"The partnership between the Gene Editing Institute and Delaware  Tech is an exciting opportunity to combine the talents of the research  laboratory headed by Dr. Kmiec with the teaching expertise of instructors at  Delaware Tech," said Mark T. Brainard, president at Delaware Tech, in a  prepared statement. "Through the network of schools that participate in  our workshops, we will be able to disseminate emerging techniques in gene  editing."
McDowell and Kmiec plan to develop a curriculum that focuses on yeast  genetics, mammalian tissue culture, sequence analysis and bioinformatics tools  with a special focus on ethics.
"In Delaware, the majority of the bioscience majors continue their  education at the University of Delaware before entering the workforce," McDowell said in a prepared statement. "Learning  mammalian tissue culture and gene editing techniques at the undergraduate level  at Delaware Tech will position students who go on to study bioscience at UD to  be more competitive for academic advancement and ultimately for employment upon  graduation."
The team also plans to use the award to develop effective methods to  teach college instructors how to best teach gene editing in their own classrooms.
"Initially, we piloted the curriculum and the experimental exercise  with community college instructors from around the country, as well as some  student groups," said Kmiec in a news release. "The feedback and  results have been overwhelmingly positive, and we have numerous requests  already to share the developed curriculum across the country."
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
            
        
        
                
                    About the Author
                    
                
                    
                    Joshua Bolkan is contributing editor for Campus Technology, THE Journal and STEAM Universe. He can be reached at [email protected].