No DNA Undetected At Newtown High School
No DNA Undetected At Newtown High School
By Tanjua Damon
Biotechnology and forensics are everywhere â literally. And juniors and seniors at Newtown High School are a step ahead of the guessing game of DNA in a new science class being offered at the school.
With their lab coats and safety glasses on, 20 students in Nancy Contoliniâs Biotechnology and Forensic Science class were working on an experiment Monday during the new science class offered at the high school.
 Students will be gaining knowledge in both biotechnology and forensic science, according to Ms Contolini, who also teaches biology. The hope is that students will not only learn skills they can use in other areas, but also to interest them in science.
âI want to encourage students to go into science as a career. Even if they donât, a lot of what they do will be based on DNA,â she said. âItâs problem solving. They are also learning lab skills. They may use them in lab in the future. Itâs performance based. They are actually doing things that are done in real labs. Itâs authentic.â
Students will be exposed to both biotechnology and forensic science. The two go hand-in-hand with trying to solve the mystery of who did it, Ms Contolini said. The two are complex and contain a lot of information.
In the biotechnology part of the course students will be exposed to genetic engineering, transforming bacteria, how you can put genes from one organism into another, purifying proteins made by genetic engineering, PCR (polymerase change reaction), identifying, amplifying, and sequencing DNA.
âEven small damaged pieces of DNA can be analyzed and processed through DNA screening,â Ms Contolini said.
On the forensic side students will be real detectives and learn about the things that can help solve a crime scene including forgery, finger printing, foot print, hair, fiber, serology, blood typing, blood splatter prints, geology, sand/soil, glass fragments, toxicology, and looking at drugs using the Physicians Desk Reference.
âWe will look at paintings to see if they are forged,â she said. âAnd students will look at samples of medicines and drugs trying to identifying the unknown. It will be problem solving. They will be given a lot of clues and have to figure out what they are.â
So far Ms Contolini said the students are interested in the class and are excited about the information they are gaining. Even she admits to enjoying the new class.
âThey like it because they are manipulating and work in labs a lot,â Ms Contolini said. âThey learn theory and actual skills. Itâs fun for me too. Iâm experimenting.â
Many of the juniors and seniors in the class are there not only to gain information about biotechnology and forensics, but to see what a career in the field would be like for the future.
âI want to be in the FBI and work with forensics,â senior Helena Baonagurio said. âYou learn a lot about measuring. DNA is so in the future, I think a lot of jobs will deal with that.â
Emily Moran is also interested in forensic science and thought it would be a good idea to take the class in high school.
âIâm interested in forensics,â Emily said. âThatâs what this class is based on. There is a lot of group work.â
Senior Mary McDow likes the hands-on technology she is experiencing in the Biotechnology and Forensic Science class.
âFor a really long time I wanted to go into a field that deals with forensics,â Mary said. âWeâre doing more hands on than I thought we were going to do. Weâre in the lab more than I thought, which I think is better. I learn more that way.â
Junior James Kaechele enjoys the amount of time that the class spends in lab because he feels it will help him in the future.
âItâs great lab experiments,â he said. âI hope to teach science. This is good lab experience. I have to know what is going on if I plan to teach.â
The Career Center at the high school has arranged for the students to go to the Connecticut Crime Lab, Ms Contolini said. The students also hope to be able to meet Dr Henry Lee, the stateâs most famous forensic scientist.