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Discovering Biology in a Digital World

My thoughts on biology, teaching, life, and exploring the living world via the digital one. Only my opinions are represented by these postings, they do not represent the viewpoints of any funding agency or Geospiza, Inc.

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Sandra Porter I am a microbiologist and molecular biologist turned tenured biotech faculty turned bioinformatics scientist turned entrepreneur. My passion is developing instructional materials for 21st century biology (Geospiza Education).

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    « California Burning! | Main | Metagenomics and the mystery of the dying bees »

    Making discoveries in the open: doing digital biology with the class

    Category: BioinformaticsMicrobiologyScience educationclassroom activitiesenvironmental educationsequence analysisteachingweb resources
    Posted on: October 24, 2007 4:05 PM, by Sandra Porter

    Would you like to have some fun playing with chromatograms and helping our class identify bacteria in the dirt?

    This quarter, my bioinformatics class, at Shoreline Community College, will be working with chromatograms that were obtained by students at Johns Hopkins University, and graciously made available by Dr. Rebecca Pearlman. (See see "Sequencing the campus at the Johns Hopkins University" for more background.)

    We are going to do a bit of metagenomics by using FinchTV and blastn to identify the soil bacteria that were sampled from different biomes and then use an SQL query that I wrote and stored in our iFinch to summarize the results.

    This image shows where the samples came from.

    If you'd like to play along, send an e-mail to me at digitalbio at gmail dot com with your school and contact info and I'll send you information for logging in as a guest. I'll be posting instructions here, throughout the course. I'll leave the guest accounts active until mid November.

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