City U of New York Grad Students Create Free Science Curriculum for DNA Barcoding

Two doctoral candidates at the City University of New York Graduate Center recently scored prizes from the American Association for the Advancement of Science for a project in which they created a free inquiry-based science curriculum to teach college and high school students how to do modern biological research.

Marissa Bellino, who is studying urban education, and Stephen Harris, who is studying biology, sought to develop an "experience and skill set" that would encourage students to become interested in the sciences. The project began in 2010 at a public high school in New York City through a STEM education program run by the National Science Foundation. The project has also been tested in Belize, a country that had no DNA lab before the program was put on for about 20 high school students.

In "DNA Barcoding from NYC to Belize" students collect field samples and learn how to extract DNA and generate barcodes. According to Bellino and Harris, "sampling can occur in local parks as a way to inventory biological diversity or at local markets to investigate potential mislabeling."

The course materials also explain to teachers how to run both low-budget and more advanced DNA barcoding labs. DNA barcoding is the process of identifying species based on short fragments of DNA. The DNA sequences developed in the two field tests have been made publicly available on The Barcode of Life Data Systems as a resource for the international scientific community.

The yearlong curriculum covers five major topics:

  • Sampling local biodiversity;
  • Molecular biology theory and practice;
  • The science of DNA barcoding;
  • Analyzing DNA barcodes; and
  • Generating DNA barcoding research questions.

Educators are also encouraged to work with individual units to fit time constraints and unique student needs. The work encompasses reading scientific literature, and students are introduced to the C.R.E.A.T.E. protocol, a method for unpacking complex scientific text and generating research questions.

In the culminating sessions students learn how to develop proposals and produce results that can be presented at science competitions or uploaded online to the GenBank Sequence Database or the Barcode of Life Data System. Research projects already undertaken in the program include finding the genetic diversity of bed bugs in New York City, identifying bioindicator species in polluted parks, and investigating the mislabeling of fish fillets from local fish markets in Belize.

About the Author

Dian Schaffhauser is a former senior contributing editor for 1105 Media's education publications THE Journal, Campus Technology and Spaces4Learning.

Featured

  • modern college building with circuit and brain motifs

    Anthropic Launches Claude for Education

    Anthropic has announced a version of its Claude AI assistant tailored for higher education institutions. Claude for Education "gives academic institutions secure, reliable AI access for their entire community," the company said, to enable colleges and universities to develop and implement AI-enabled approaches across teaching, learning, and administration.

  • SXSW EDU

    SXSW EDU 2025 on Higher Education and Ever-changing Technology

    Join education's most passionate community this March 3-6, 2025 at a special 15th-annual SXSW EDU Conference & Festival in Austin, Texas.

  • AI robot with cybersecurity symbol on its chest

    Microsoft Adds New Agentic AI Tools to Security Copilot

    Microsoft has announced a major expansion of its AI-powered cybersecurity platform, introducing a suite of autonomous agents to help organizations counter rising threats and manage the growing complexity of cloud and AI security.

  • Abstract widescreen image with geometric shapes, flowing lines, and digital elements like graphs and data points in soft blue and white gradients.

    5 Trends to Watch in Higher Education for 2025

    In 2025, the trends shaping higher education reflect a continuous transformation of the higher education landscape to meet the changing needs of students and staff, while maintaining sustainable and cost-effective institutional practices.