Archive for the ‘volunteers’ Category

Summer Streets with New York Botanical Garden

Thursday, August 18th, 2011

Things on the BioBus were simply floral during a NYBG street fair on Saturday, August 13, 2011. The fair was held to celebrate Farmers’ Market Week, and it is safe to say that there was a large variety of produce offered by both NYBG stands and the actual farmers’ market. There, the BioBus’ staff (comprised of Dr. Ben, Nikki, Juliana, & Jordan) bought some beautiful bouquets hosting a variety of flowers…most of which were immediately brutalized by one Juliana (an intern at the BioBus) via scalpel. These lovely dissected samples were not wasted though! No, every and each sliver was carefully placed under the BioBus’s stereo microscopes under high magnification. Many children learned about the reproductive aspects of those flowers: where the specific organs are located and how a flower is pollinated. Some even got a short description of a plant’s vascular tissue, by yours truly. All the while, each person was given a sheet of paper containing visual aids with labeled arrows to aid them in their search for the plant reproductive organs.

“He’s so amazed; he’s trying to look at every part of the flower,” exclaimed an enthused mother, whose son was preoccupied with a bright red specimen.

These sheets even had spaces laid out for everyone, mainly the children, to draw what he had seen! Everything that was viewed, from the original flowers to their magnified samples were messily recorded and pasted onto the bus itself, and there they stayed until the event’s end.

The festival was a great success; as a man on a loud speaker announced, people were caught groaning that they had to leave. That made me snort. It was a long couple of hours that were extremely enjoyable.

 

 

—Jordan Sutphen

SciTech Education Camp—BioBus Style

Thursday, June 30th, 2011

Monday, June 20, 2011 was a distinct day for the little scientist going to SciTech Education Camp, a summer camp hosted by the New York Junior League. On that day, they were scheduled for an entertaining visit by New York’s very own BioBus! As they came to class, they were greeted by bona fide volunteer scientists (Clare Walton from Rockefeller) who came to help both Dr. Ben Dubin-Thaler (BioBus founder) and Sarah Weisberg (Dr.Ben’s good friend and co-conspirator) with their lesson for the day.

So, at about 9:00 the kiddies arrived in pairs of two—holding hand as they navigated the roads of Manhattan—looking more like scientists than the actual ones in their stylish white lab coats. When they arrived with their minders, they were instantly greeted by Sarah Weisberg. She was the one who would be doing the teaching for the day! She ushered them to the street curb and started the lesson off with a tour of the BioBus’ exterior. Ms. Weisberg explained to them how the BioBus worked without being “plugged into a wall,” as some of the children put it, by pointing out some of its fascinating features, such as its solar panels and turbine. Then it was off to one of the lakes in Central Park, where the students collected samples of water, and a few creepy-crawlies, using high-tech standard equipment (pipettes and test tubes). They then went back to the BioBus to view their findings under some of the BioBus’ famous research-grade microscopes. There, the kids discovered that there were, in fact, organisms smaller than “ants!”

They saw demonstrations on how to use that equipment and then got to use it themselves! Many stared open-mouthed at a daphnia found in the water samples as they viewed its twitching body parts and beating heart! Some even believed they witnessed some unknown flagellated microorganism race across the microscope screen. The day was a long one for the little scientists though, so it was cut short when they left to return to their class on aching feet. Then, after the microscopes were packed up, the turbine was taken down, and everything was sorted out by Ben and Sarah, the bus took off and revved down the street—on to its next stop at its next gig: the local deli. Hey, scientists have to eat too.

—Jordan Sutphen

Start BioBus 2011 with a Bang!

Monday, January 3rd, 2011

2010 was an amazing year for the BioBus. Here are some of our proudest achievements:

  • Over 13,000 people boarded the BioBus at 59 different schools and communities
  • Surveys and interviews with over 300 students and teachers revealed that students’ attitudes towards science are strongly improved following a visit to the BioBus, and that the impact is lasting
  • The BioBus now employs two full-time scientists! I look forward to introducing you to Sarah Weisberg, our new full-timer in the weeks and months to come. In addition to our full-time staff, we have had an amazing part-time staff in addition to 50 volunteer scientists that helped teach in 2010.
  • We’ve received fantastic press coverage, from NBC to Discovery News to the New Jersey Herald to German National Television. Check out the “Maker Pioneers” video for an example.
  • 100′s of you donated thousands of dollars to the BioBus to keep us moving forward and allowing affordable visits to low-income schools. Over half of BioBus students come from federally identified “low-income” households.

Vote Today and Help the BioBus Win $25,000!!

Pepsi has chosen the BioBus as a contestant to win $25,000 this month! With your help we will win and continue to offer discounts to low-income communities, in addition to finishing our lesson that focuses on diabetes and obesity. You can vote three times every day this month by doing the following:

1. Text “105112” to Pepsi (73774)

2. Facebook Click on ‘Go to App’ and search for ‘BioBus’

3. Pepsi Refresh Website (Shortlink: http://pep.si/dX8i7o or http://www.refresheverything.com/cellsinmotion). Quick and easy registration using your email address, then vote again.

We need you to vote every day in January. We will win if we are in the top ten by the end of this month. I know we can do it!

Send a blank email to pepsi+subscribe@biobus.org to receive short daily emails reminding you to vote and with updates on our ranking.

However, if you’d rather not have anything to do with this contest, please consider making a direct donation instead: http://www.biobus.org/donate

Thank you for your continuing support,
Ben

BioBus & Pepsi