Wednesday, August 28, 2024

Arizona Department of Environmental Quality, Federal Projects Unit (Superfund) Internship listing

 My unit is offering an internship, please feel free to share with your students. If they have questions they can contact me. 


Katelyn Kane-DeVries, PRG
Project Manager/ Hydrogeologist, Federal Projects Unit
Waste Programs Division 
Ph: 602-771-0167

U.S. Geological Survey Science and Careers in the Southeast: Virtual Event on September 12, 2024

 Have you ever wondered what it takes to pursue a career with the U.S. Geological Survey? Interested in knowing how to search for and apply for federal jobs? Join us virtually on Thursday, September 12, 2024, to learn about the science and diverse careers offered at the USGS.

 
 
Who: Undergraduate and graduate students (from STEM and non-STEM fields), post-docs, and early career scientists
 
What: Learn about the diverse career paths USGS offers, get tips from USGS Human Resources staff on how to navigate the federal hiring process via USAJobs and build your federal resume, and meet and network with federal staff and scientists across multiple disciplines, including:

  • Science Support – Hear from USGS staff who specialize in administration, information technology, database management, and science communication.
 
  • Technical Capabilities – Meet USGS staff and scientists who help lead our laboratories, marine operations, unmanned aerial systems, scientific diving, field operations, and programming.
 
  • Research – Interact with USGS scientists with expertise in biology and ecosystems, coastal and marine hazards and resources, and water resources.
 
When: Thursday, September 12 – 10 am – 4 pm Eastern*
 
*We understand that you are busy and may not be able to attend the entire event. Please participate in whatever capacity you can. We will record the sessions to share after the event.
 
Why: We want to meet you! We also want to share our passion for the important work we do nationwide and demystify the federal hiring process.
 
How: Please register for the event. Only registrants will receive the meeting link, as well as the recordings and other meeting materials post-event.
 
 
For more information and to register for the event, visit: https://www.usgs.gov/centers/spcmsc/news/event-explore-usgs-careers-southeast-2024
 
Please spread the word to your classmates and colleagues who may be interested in pursuing a career with USGS!



Wednesday, August 21, 2024

Fall 2024 Events to find Environmental Studies!

Fall 2024 Events to find Environmental Studies!

August

September

October

  • Native Garden Event - planting natives & thinning goldenrod
    • Details TBD
  • Grad Colloquium with Public Administration: Jay Rickabaugh from NC State 
    • Either October 24/25 or October 31/November 1


Recent Graduate or Near-Term Graduation - Geologist/Physical Scientist/Hydrologist

 

This posting is open to Recent Graduates who have completed a qualifying degree or certificate from a qualifying educational institution or technical education program within the preceding 2 years of application submittal OR current students who will complete a qualifying degree/certificate within 9 months of the announcement closing date. (eg- individuals who will graduate in December 2024 or May 2025 are also eligible to apply).

Recent Graduate or Near-Term Graduation - Geologist/Physical Scientist/Hydrologist

Agency: Environmental Protection Agency
Location(s): Many vacancies - Chicago, Illinois
Salary: $54,728.00 to $87,024.00 / PA
Series and Grade: GS-1350/1301/1315-07/09
Open Period: Wednesday, August 21, 2024 to Tuesday, August 27, 2024
Position Information: Recent Graduates - Full-time
Who May Apply: Recent graduates

Friday, August 16, 2024

Boone County Conservation District Job Opportunities

The Boone County Conservation District (BCCD) is now accepting applications for a Fall/Winter seasonal Natural Resources Technician.  The BCCD is also sponsoring an AmeriCorps position which will run from September, 2024 until the end of August, 2025. 

The job description and application may be accessed at https://www.bccdil.org/about/employment/.  

The AmeriCorps full-year position may be accessed at https://my.americorps.gov/mp/listing/viewListing.do?fromSearch=true&id=123462.

 

Frank Rabbit

Director of Natural Resources

www.bccdil.org

(815) 547-7935






Friday, August 9, 2024

Looking for volunteers for biomass collection at CAPER 8/13-8/16

We are looking for volunteers to help out with biomass collection at CAPER next week. If you haven't already been to CAPER (the experimental prairie site located on NIU's campus), please let me know so I can send you the location. We are planning to be out in the field for four full workdays from Tuesday, August 13th to Friday, August 16th

If you are available and interested in helping out, please email (or text) me as soon as you can with the days and/or times you would like to help out! No worries if you are unable to stay for a full day, any time you are willing and able to give will be much appreciated!

Much appreciated,

Ana

Christiana (Ana) Guthrie (she/her)

Laboratory Technician in the Evidence-Based Restoration Lab

mobile: (630) 777-1607

alternative email: christianaguthrie01@gmail.com

Monday, August 5, 2024

Fall Course Option - Molecular Pathogen Diagnostic Testing


There are no hard prerequisites for the course, other than having completed an introductory biology course covering molecular biology (e.g., BIOS 208), and ideally, a gateway course like BIOS 302.  They are really looking for serious students who would like to get lab experience.

Course Description

This course is designed to provide students with foundational and technical skills required to work in a testing or research laboratory setting as a technician, using pathogen detection (and our wastewater surveillance testing lab) as an exemplar of the application of these skills. For natural science majors in the biology/chemistry fields, such positions are frequently the first jobs students enter after graduation, and often serve as a gateway to professional careers in STEM fields. Students will learn lab skills and foundational molecular biology techniques, building up to molecular diagnostic techniques via Reverse Transcription - quantitative PCR (RT-qPCR), the technical workflow we use in wastewater surveillance testing. 

The course is a combination of background principles, which will be literature and information based, and lab skills, which will be executed and practiced in the lab.  Each week, background material will be posted on the course Blackboard website and needs to be completed before coming to the lab on Fridays. Quizzes will be utilized to assess learning outcomes in each of the modules, and skills assessment will be used to gauge technical proficiency. The didactic (content) portion will be through Blackboard; the lab skills portion will be in-place. Thus, this laboratory course can be considered as “hybrid”.  

What will I learn in this course?

  • Lab Safety
  • Solution preparation skills
  • Basic micropipetting skills
  • Aseptic technique and BSL-2 maintenance
  • Automated and manual biologic concentration for downstream analysis
  • Automated and manual nucleic acid extraction and isolation
  • Polymerase Chain Reaction (PCR, incl. RT-qPCR)
  • The basics of other pathogen detection modalities like rapid tests and ELISAs
  • Construction of workflows and assay trouble-shooting
  • Operation of common laboratory equipment
  • The principles and components of experimental lab research and design, including variables, appropriate controls, standards, quantitative analysis, and maintenance of a laboratory notebook (record-keeping and organization)

ABOUT THE INSTRUCTOR

Dr. Barrie Bode grew up in a diverse working class neighborhood in Ferguson, MO (a near-north suburb of St Louis), went to public schools, and worked summer jobs (landscaping, restaurants, gas stations, life guard, construction) since age 14.  He majored in Biology at Saint Louis University, and his first job after graduation was as a laboratory technician in an industrial lab, which he worked for two years while taking night courses in biochemistry. He went to graduate school and as a young parent earned his PhD in Biochemistry and Molecular Biology at the University of Florida College of Medicine. He did his postdoctoral research in the Liver Biology labs in the Health Sciences Division of Monsanto back in his hometown of St. Louis. From there, was recruited to Massachusetts General Hospital/Harvard Medical School in Boston to help establish and run the Surgical Oncology Research Laboratories, launched his academic career into the molecular physiological underpinnings of liver cancer – and taught surgical residents the principles and techniques of translational biomedical research. In 1999, he returned to Saint Louis University where he ran his NIH-funded lab in amino acid transport and cancer, taught multiple courses in molecular and cellular biology and human physiology, and was a member of the SLU Liver Center and Cancer Center in the Saint Louis University Medical Center. In 2009, he came to NIU as the new department chair of Biological Sciences – and held that position until the fall of 2020, when he was appointed to run the COVID-19 testing program on campus during the pandemic. In January of 2021, he established the wastewater surveillance testing program in collaboration with the Kishwaukee Water Reclamation District, and recruited Syed Hyder to help launch and run the wastewater testing laboratory. The program has been running for three years, and the evolving dashboard reporting virus levels has been in place since the spring of 2021. Beginning in the summer of 2023, Dr. Bode was appointed as the interim Associate VP for Research to help run the research enterprise on the NIU campus under new VPR, Dr. Yvonne Harris – also an NIU alumnus.

ABOUT THE COURSE

This lab course was made possible through a grant from SHIELD Illinois, who ran the saliva based SARS-CoV-2 rapid qPCR testing program in the state – including the NIU campus – during the pandemic. Molecular testing training is very expensive, so an external grant was required to create this course. 

Back-story: As SHIELD-Illinois staffed their testing labs, it quickly became evident that there were not enough trained laboratory personnel to keep pace, and there was a need to look at workforce development beyond the COVID-19 pandemic. Likewise, our mission at NIU is to teach and train students for careers beyond academics. This course was therefore borne out of an intersection between mission and regional workforce needs. SHIELD Illinois likewise converted their testing labs in Chicago to partially engage in workforce development – led by NIU (and Bode lab) alumnus Natalie Lubbers – via the creation of the Clinical Laboratory Development Program (CLDP). The CLDP, based at the University of Illinois-Chicago (UIC) incubator space, is a more comprehensive program than this course, but the two closely align – and we work with the CLDP to inform curricular development. This course is the first iteration of this funded collaboration between the University of Illinois and NIU.