Paper
8 June 2005 Development of a biophotonics technician-training program: directions for the 21st Century
James F. Shackelford, Joel Gellman, Srini Vasan, Robert A. Hall, Don E. Goodwin, Marco Molinaro, Dennis Matthews
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
Albuquerque Technical Vocational Institute (TVI) is collaborating with the National Science Foundation (NSF) funded Center for Biophotonics Science and Technology (CBST) headquartered at the University of California, Davis in order to develop a biophotonics curriculum for community colleges nationwide. TVI began the formal collaboration to bring about critically needed training and education that will ultimately create new jobs and employment opportunities in the field of biophotonics. "Biophotonics" is the science of generating and harnessing light to detect, image and manipulate biological materials. CBST chose TVI as a partner because of the Institute's current high-level photonics and biotechnology programs. In addition, TVI is a part of the "Albuquerque Model" that involves exposure to photonics education from the middle school level through graduate education at the University of New Mexico. Three middle schools feed into the West Mesa High School Photonics Academy, whose students then move on to TVI for advanced training. CBST brings together scientists, industry, educators and the community to research and develop applications for biophotonics. Roughly 100 researchers-including physical scientists, life scientists, physicians and engineers from UC Davis, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, UC Berkeley, UC San Francisco, Alabama A&M University, Stanford University, University of Texas at San Antonio, Fisk University and Mills College-are collaborating in this rapidly developing area of research. Applications of biophotonics range from using light to image or selectively treat tumors, to sequencing DNA and identifying single biomolecules within cells.
© (2005) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
James F. Shackelford, Joel Gellman, Srini Vasan, Robert A. Hall, Don E. Goodwin, Marco Molinaro, and Dennis Matthews "Development of a biophotonics technician-training program: directions for the 21st Century", Proc. SPIE 5827, Opto-Ireland 2005: Photonic Engineering, (8 June 2005); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.619530
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CITATIONS
Cited by 2 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Biomedical optics

Photonics

Laser safety

Mathematics

Electronics

Laser applications

Biophotonic applications

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