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K-12 If a Starfish Can Grow a New Arm, Why Can’t I


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Through original programming and collaboration with regional and national organizations, PTEI enriches K-12 science education with innovative learning experiences for students and teachers that directly involve them in the world of biotechnology, biomedicine, and the emerging field of regenerative medicine.


2010 Summer Camp Information

PDF Summer Camp 2010 brochure


Tissue Engineering
Camp-on-CD

The instructional materials and activities of the Tissue Engineering Summer Camp are now available to educators and middle school students on a CD.

Hands-on, inquiry-based activities are included as well as instructions for incorporating camp activities in the classroom. Field trips and live presentations may also be arranged.

Order your copy of the Tissue Engineering Summer Camp for only $8.00.

PDF Download Order Form

Go to Learn more about Summer Camp activities and access Camp-on-CD



“If a Starfish Can Grow a New Arm, Why Can’t I?”

Connecting TE to the Classroom
A PTEI/CSC/ASSET Partnership

 

ASSET will provide training opportunities for teachers who are interested in infusing Tissue Engineering education in their classrooms. By attending this professional development session, teachers will have an understanding of the content involved in Tissue Engineering in order to make the appropriate connections between the Carnegie Science Center exhibit and their classroom. Even if teachers are not ASSET district members, or decide not to attend the exhibit, the professional development will provide tools to begin making connections into their classrooms. Read more...

go to The Heinz Endowments: In the Spotlight

***Dates for Spring 2010 TBA!***

For additional information, please contact:
Deborah Spencer, ASSET Program Manager, dspencer@assetinc.org or
Sarah Chesney, ASSET Resource Teacher, schesney@assetinc.org
Office Phone: 412.481.7320




"If a Starfish Can Grow a New Arm, Why Can't I?"
Exhibit Opened October 17, 2009
at the Carnegie Science Center!!


Starfish Exhibit Guest.  Photo credit: Michel Sauret/Post-Gazette.
At the right, Alina, 7, plays with a video scope with her mother, Juli Milan, of the South Side, and sister, Kendall, 5, at a new exhibit called, "If a Starfish Can Grow a New Arm, Why Can't I?", which was unveiled yesterday by the Carnegie Science Center and the Pittsburgh Tissue Engineering Initiative. Read more...

Go to Carnegie Science Center exhibit explores tissue regeneration,
Pittsburgh Tribune-Review (10/15/09)

Go to Science Center Unveils New Exhibit (w/video),
KDKA (10/15/09)

Go to New exhibit hopes to intrigue next generation of researchers,
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette (10/16/09)

PDF Carnegie Science Center Press Release
PDF Starfish Project Overview
Go to If a Starfish Can Grow a New Arm, Why Can't I?



National Center for Research Resources, A Component of the National Institutes of Health, Awards Pittsburgh Tissue Engineering Initiative $1.26 Million to Develop Carnegie Science Center Interactive, Tissue Engineering Exhibit 

 

“If a Starfish Can Grow a New Arm, Why Can’t I?”

PDFASSET and the Starfish Exhibit

Super cell
The Pittsburgh Tissue Engineering Initiative, Inc. (PTEI) has been awarded a five-year Science Education Grant Award from the National Center for Research Resources, a component of the Institutes of Health (NIH), to develop a unique educational program focused on engaging middle school students, their teachers, and the general public in the wonders of tissue engineering and its applications. Specifically, this project provides support for an inquiry-based, permanent, 1,200 square foot exhibit on Tissue Engineering/Regenerative Medicine at the Carnegie Science Center (CSC) in Pittsburgh, PA as well as in four to five other science centers across the U.S. The exhibit primarily targets middle-school (6th-8th) grade students and their teachers and focuses on the theme, A Starfish Can Grow A New Arm, Why
Participate in designing the exhibition
One of the exhibits is a fun-sized microscope that shows an animation about stem cells. See the animation by clicking on the link below and let us know what you think!

go to See the movie SuperCell!
go to Fill out the survey

Can’t I? The interactive exhibit aims to make visitors aware of the field and promise of tissue engineering as well as highlight the significant strides Pittsburgh-based researchers are making within the field in order that they may be exposed to cutting-edge research in their own backyard. This exhibit will be provide a cutting-edge extension to the Carnegie Science Center’s basic science and sport and body concentration area.


The exhibit will first introduce the concept of tissue engineering by exposing visitors to the innate ability of lower life forms to regenerate lost body parts (e.g., starfish arms, zebrafish hearts, salamander limbs and tails). Visitors will be shown basic scientific concepts related to evolution within various lower species and will then move on to mammals, primates and human, the highest levels of organisms, which because of evaluation have largely – but, not entirely – lost this ability. Starfish exhibit
A major thrust of the exhibit will be responding to the “Why Can’t I?” dilemma by demonstrating that through one of today’s newest areas of biomedical science, tissue engineering, scientists and engineers are learning to tap into the hidden regenerative ability in humans. The underlying basics of the science and technology of tissue engineering will be provided along with an outlook for the future. Balanced with this will be a sensitive exploration of the ethical issues, myths, and misconceptions that currently surround the field.

With appreciation of the need for the Carnegie Science Center experience to extend to the classroom, emphasis is also placed on the development of complementary educational materials, inquiry-based classroom activities, and teacher professional development. This effort is led by ASSET (Achieving Student Success through Excellence in Teaching), a local nonprofit, fee-for-service education reform organization. More than 75 percent of Allegheny County school districts use ASSET classroom materials and teacher professional development programs and ASSET is widely supported by area teachers, educational administrators and school boards. ASSET is recognized as a regional and national leader by its peers in educational reform and is key to the success of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania’s, Department of Education goal to enhance science education through participation in Governor Edward G. Rendell’s “Science: It’s Elementary” initiative.

"If a starfish can grow a new arm, why can't I?"

The $1.26 million Science Education Partnership Awards (SEPA) is made to PTEI through the National Center for Research Resources (NCRR), which was designed to improve life science literacy across the U.S. These grants bring together biomedical and behavioral researchers, educators, community groups, and other interested organizations in partnerships to create and disseminate programs that give K-12 students and teachers and the general public a better understanding of life sciences.

PTEI’s key partners in this project include the Carnegie Science Center, ASSET and the University of Pittsburgh learning Research and Development Center. “We’ve set out an innovative plan, bridging informal and formal learning environments, to develop new ways to excite interest and explain key science and engineering concepts related to the field of tissue engineering to students, teachers, and the public-at-large,” says Joan Schanck, PTEI Director of Education and Principal Investigator for the project. In addition to development and realization of the Starfish exhibit, show, which will debut in Pittsburgh during the Spring of 2009 before traveling to other science museums across the U.S. and worldwide, the project’s five-year timeline includes development of web-based development and distribution of educational materials, workshops, and an outreach program that will target K-12 youth in underrepresented and under-served rural and inner city communities.

Joan Schanck explains the development of this project as spurred by increasing levels of popular interest in tissue engineering, the wide breadth of tissue engineering related research being conducted in our own backyard, how it can be used to improve the health and quality of life for us all, the bioethical considerations this promising new field presents, and an increased need to provide accurate information in order to dispel misconceptions and misinformation. Because the material to be communicated is inherently complex and highly interdisciplinary - due to the nature of tissue engineering itself as well as the technologies used to study it - there is a particular need to present this information in an exciting and accessible format. Critically, because many of the key concepts in tissue engineering are also related to the big science concepts students are required to learn in the classroom, a contemporary, application-based approach related to telling the tale of tissue engineering will help students make important connections across the sciences as well as appreciate real-world applications. In the end, deep learning occurs when one can appreciate the applications of knowledge gained. When presented within a problem-solving, real world based context, students become more engaged and are more likely to deploy the skills and concepts they are learned.

The Pittsburgh Tissue Engineering Initiative strives to improve the health of individuals by establishing the region as an internationally recognized center of excellence in research, education, and commercial development for the advancement of tissue-related medical therapies. Our innovative programs in research, education and industry network development will continue to enhance the means by which regenerative therapies are developed and will accelerate their delivery to patients. PTEI’s regional partners include the Allegheny-Singer Research Institute, Carnegie Mellon University, Duquesne University, the University of Pittsburgh, and the UPMC Health System.

SEPA

The project described is funded by a Science Education Partnership Award from the National Center for Research Resources, a component of the National Institutes of Health (Grant Number 1 R25 RR023286), and its contents are solely the responsibility of the authors and do not necessarily represent the official views of NCRR or NIH.