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Genes & Cells Boot Camp, Fall 2002

Monday, December 2, 2002 - Monday, December 9, 2002

 

Genes. Mutations. Genomics.
Genetic engineering. Biotechnology. 
Cells. Stem cells. Tissue engineering. Cloning.
 
All are increasingly important topics in the news -- full of dramatic promise, riven by ethical and legal challenges. All are technically difficult fields that cannot be covered well without a deep understanding. And all are certain to generate bigger stories for many years to come.
 
MIT and its Knight Science Journalism Fellowships program are offering an intensive course in these topics, taught by several of the world's leading researchers and teachers. The course will begin with the fundamentals -- what cells are, what genes are and how they work. You'll learn how scientists study these things and where current research is headed. Then we'll go into the genetics of cancer, the Human Genome Project, how genes guide embryonic development, stem cell biology, cloning, the biotech industry. And we'll look at the legal, social and ethical issues.

People Attending this Bootcamp

Judy Foreman
Health Columnist
Lynn Addison
Senior Editor, Features , National Geographic magazine
Kelly Crowe
National TV Correspondent , Canadian Broadcasting Corporation
John Fleck
Staff Writer , Albuquerque Journal
Rachel Gotbaum
Reporter , WBUR Radio, Boston
Diedtra Henderson
Science/Technology Writer , The Denver Post
Celia Henry
Special Features Editor , Chemical & Engineering News
Melissa Jordan
Assistant Business Editor , San Jose Mercury News
Marilynn Marchione
Medical Reporter , The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel
Delthia Ricks
Medical Writer , Newsday
Maureen Taylor
Health Reporter , Canadian Broadcasting Corp.
Luke Timmerman
Biotechnology Reporter , The Seattle Times