Skip to main content
Science › Molecular Biology and Biochemistry
SFU Co-op Student

Lea sitting on a bench on the docks having lunch with three other people
Credit
Lea
It was an incredibly interesting experience, to go into different classrooms for two hours, notice each teacher’s strategies and learn from them, be challenged by the energy of the youngest audiences as well as by the questions of the oldest ones, and make science incredibly fun, for all our students and even for us.
Thursday, July 10, 2014

“My name is Lea, and I study Molecular Biology at Simon Fraser University! Does anyone know what Molecular Biology is? No? Molecular Biology studies cells! So if you imagine your body is a house, each of the bricks that it is made of is a cell. I study how the cells breathe, what they produce, and the information they carry - for example, why I have brown hair while Charlie here has blonde hair!”.

A candid photo of Lea and other Science AL!VE getting ready to take a group photo against a lush greenery
Credit
Lea

After the five weeks of workshops that we at Science AL!VE taught during May and June, I am so used to this enthusiastic introduction, that I have a hard time explaining what I study to anyone older than twelve. I have also become an excellent bin-packer, an unbeatable cup-washer, I have learned how to keep the attention of 25 seven-year olds on a worm dissection and grown used to addressing everyone around me as “young scientists”.

Science AL!VE is a non-profit, student-run organization. Our two directors, Ginny and Sarah, as well as the eleven of us instructors, are undergraduate students - most of us in Sciences. Our team also includes high school instructors and volunteers, some of them joining us from Quebec - taking into account all our backgrounds, Science AL!VE is quite the multicultural experience!

While Sarah and Ginny are experts at planning, organizing, finding us a cozy room even in the most remote places of Northern BC and bringing back doughnuts for their favourite team of instructors, we have become experts at packing supplies into our bins, loading the biology van, and cruising the city to find all the schools in Metro Vancouver that want to learn more about anything from:

  • Our immune system
  • Digestion
  • What happens when you combine baking soda and vinegar in a Ziploc bag
  • How an Archimedes’ screw works
  • How a volcano forms
 Lea and other Science AL!VE staff taking a selfie together
Credit
Lea

From the North Shore to Meadow Ridge, I got to see more of the Vancouver area than ever before. It was an incredibly interesting experience, to go into different classrooms for two hours, notice each teacher’s strategies and learn from them, be challenged by the energy of the youngest audiences as well as by the questions of the oldest ones, and make science incredibly fun, for all our students and even for us.

But that was before! Now we have started our summer camps here up at SFU, and also at Surrey and various outreach locations on Haida Gwaii and Northern BC. For the coming two months, our Burnaby campus will be full of Quarks, Electrons, Ions, Tech and Eco campers and Nebula girls. Based on this first week, I predict a lot of exciting visits to labs and other mentor events, many races through the Academic Quadrangle Gardens during lunch, quite a few wet instructors after our Friday water games, a surprised “Ohhhh!” here and there during Science Shows, and tons of fun. I hope I manage to share it with you here on this blog!

Beyond the Blog

  • Visit the Science AL!VE website to learn more about their programs! 

SFU Co-op Student
visibility  114
Nov 15, 2014

You Might Like These... Co-op Reflections, Professional Development, Career Exploration, Seeking, Work Term Extension

author, courtney, smiling
A Second Term in Government: More of the Same?

Having completed my first work term for Health Canada as a Communications Officer Intern, I was eager to try something new, and the government was not where I believed that was going to happen. That is until I was offered a position at Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada...

picture of glichelle pondering a though
Surviving Workplace Politics

Ever been peeved with workplace politics? Have you ever been a victim of office politics? One student shares her experiences from the workplace with tips on how to survive.

 

person with their head in a book
Responsibility and Success

One of the most memorable parts of my time in co-op was the collection of accidents, errors, mistakes, and mix-ups that happened in the course of working in the laboratory.

 

You Might Like These... Co-op Reflections

Google searching bar and a magnifier
E-E-E

"There's more to finding a job than surfing the net" These are the famous words career advisors state on a daily basis to current students and recent graduates. A well-rounded job search strategy is critical for career success and involves the 3 E’s for excelling: EXPLORE, EXPERIENCE and ENGAGE

Japan building
Co-op Japan: 9-month Internship at NTT, Yokosuka, Japan

Co-op Japan: 9 months in Japan can seem like a long time away from the comforts of SFU. But as we all know, if you’re having fun, time flies. For Duncan Chan, all he saw was time fly as he experienced life in Japan like no other. He worked his Co-op work terms, developed friendships, and gained new skills he can utilize in the future – everything he did in Japan was that once-in-a-lifetime opportunity and he took it until the very end.

Fort Langley Landscape
A Survival Guide to Living in the 1800s

Surviving in a trading fort in the wild west now known as British Columbia was tough in the 1800s. A time when 9 out of 10 of your meals would have been salmon and potatoes and grocery shopping would mean bringing a musket into the woods. Alexis, shares what she learned about surviving the 1800s.