Course Description: Lectures
Course Description: Lectures
As its name suggests, 7.02 / 10.702 is fundamentally an experimental biology course. Thus, you will
spend most of your "in-class" time in the teaching laboratory practicing fundamental techniques in
microbiology, biochemistry, and cell biology. In addition to learning how to perform these techniques
safely, we want to help you understand why techniques work the way they do, and what scientific
questions can be addressed with different techniques. Our focus is on helping you integrate factual
knowledge with an understanding of experimental design and data analysis - skills that will be important
should you later pursue a UROP, take a Project Lab course, or go on to graduate or medical school.
Over the course of the term, you will complete four, three week "modules" in the areas of Microbial
Genetics, Protein Biochemistry, Recombinant DNA Methods, and Development. Through lectures and
recitations related to each module, you will gain context for the experiments you will carry out in the
teaching laboratory, and will be exposed to techniques beyond the scope of this course. In the
laboratory itself, you will be asked to keep a complete record of your experimental work in the form of a
laboratory notebook, to grapple with (sometimes confusing) results, and to fit each day's experiments
into the context of the module as a whole.
Scientific Communication
In addition to working in the laboratory, you will also be learning to communicate your scientific findings
to a broader audience. As you may or may not know, much of a practicing scientist's time is spent
writing and communicating his/her results - in the form of grant applications, manuscripts, talks, and
poster presentations - yet many scientists are never formally "taught" these things. In biweekly
SciComm sections, you will encounter the seven parts of a scientific research article, and will have the
opportunity to practice this type of writing through in-class and out-of-class exercises. Many of the
SciComm assignments connect directly to the experiments done in the teaching laboratory, thus
allowing students to reinforce their understanding of this material through their writing. Scientific
communication - like research science - is a collaborative effort, and thus you will have the opportunity
to read and give feedback on your peers' writing. You will also be encouraged to use the feedback from
your peers and writing instructors to improve your writing through frequent revisions.
The Scientific Communication content for this course can be found in the 7.02CI Experimental Biology -
Communications Intensive, Spring 2005 OCW Web site.
Class Meetings
Lectures
Lectures are held twice weekly for all students and cover material related to each of the four areas of
Microbial Genetics, Protein Biochemistry, Recombinant DNA Methods, and Development.
SciComm
Students will be assigned to a SciComm section. SciComm sections meet approximately every other
week during the term for 2 hours (6 meetings total).
Laboratory Partners
Students in the teaching laboratory work in teams of two, and are assigned to a particular bench station.
You may request a particular person to be your laboratory partner when filling out the Student
Information Sheet; requests will be honored if:
1. Both partners make the request; and
2. Both students are placed in the same laboratory section.
A word of warning: best friends don't always make the best laboratory partners, so choose wisely!
If you do not request a laboratory partner, one will be assigned to you. We will try to place people with
partners that live on the same side of campus or on the same side of the river to facilitate data
exchange and preparation for lab. No laboratory partner changes will be made after Genetics session 4.