High School Students Get Jump Start on Science Careers with Special Summer Program

When we think of high school summer jobs what typically comes to mind are images of lawn-mowing, camp-counseling, and baby-sitting. But for eight high school students from the East Bay Area, a job this summer means a lab coat and safety glasses.

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The iCLEM Program Gives Students Hands-On Science Experience and a Salary

When we think of high school summer jobs what typically comes to mind are images of lawn-mowing, camp-counseling, life-guarding at a swimming pool, and baby-sitting. But for eight high school students from the East Bay Area, a job this summer means a lab coat and safety glasses, working in a state-of-the art microbiology research facility on the next-step in bioenergy.

The program known as “iCLEM,” which stands for Introductory College Level Experience in Microbiology, is a unique paid summer internship for high school students who trend outside the typical curve of academic enrichment. Sponsored by the Joint BioEnergy Institute (JBEI) and the Synthetic Biology Engineering Research Center (SynBERC), with funding from the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) and the National Science Foundation (NSF), iCLEM pays the students a total of $2,000 upon completion of an eight-week program in which they do real science in collaboration with high school teachers and researchers from JBEI and SynBERC.

Chris Talentino, Richmond High School, lead teacher this summer for the iCLEM program, works with student Lidia Bran, also of Richmond High. At iCLEM, students and teachers do actual science in a microbiology laboratory. Roy Kaltschmidt, Berkeley Lab
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