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Teach Science Concepts and Inquiry with Food
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Dr. Sufian Alkhaldi
Dr. Alkhaldi is a principal investigator of the DNA Microarray
Laboratory in the Center for Food Safety and Applied Nutrition at the US
Food and Drug Administration in College Park, Maryland. He graduated
from Oklahoma State University in 1992 with a Masters degree in
Microbiology and Molecular Genetics. He completed his Ph.D. in 1998 in
the field of Microbiology, Cell, and Molecular Biology also at Oklahoma
State University. Dr. Alkhaldi conducted two postdoctoral studies. The
first one was pursued at the University of Georgia (UGA. Dr. Alkhaldi's
second postdoctoral work was at Emory University. He was selected to
manage the DNA Microarray core facility at Yerkes Primate Research
Center.
Dr. Alkhaldi's work focuses on identifying pathogenic virulence
genes isolated from food. Dr. Alkhaldi is also a field outbreak
investigator. He is an adjunct professor at the School of Medicine and
Health Sciences at George Washington University's graduate program in
Genomics, Proteomics and Bioinformatics since 2005. As of July 7th 2007,
Dr. Alkhaldi's work is documented at considerable length in 19
peer-reviewed scientific publications covering original research, nine
review articles and chapters, and two patents. Dr. Alkhaldi's research
has been recognized by ten awards since 2000. For complete information
of his work please go to www.Suf-Microarray.com.
Camille E. Brewer
Ms. Brewer joined FDA in 1992 and was immediately assigned to the drafting team
responsible for the development of the Nutrition Facts label. She was lead drafter
of the calories, calories from fat, sodium, and potassium sections of the final
rule on nutrition labeling. As Team Leader for Regulations Policy Development at
CFSAN’s former Office of Food Labeling, Ms. Brewer was the principal author of the
proposed and final rule updating the list of Daily Values, nutrient content claims
for dietary supplements, and structure function claims for dietary supplements.
She joined the Food Safety Staff as International Activities Coordinator for Food
Safety in 1996. In 2004, she became the Associate Director of the Office of Nutrition,
Labeling, and Dietary Supplement Programs.
Ms. Brewer is the recipient of the 1998 United States Public Health Service Award
and a two-time winner of FDA’s Award of Merit, the agency’s highest honor award.
She earned her Masters Degree in Public Health Nutrition at the Case Western Reserve
University in Cleveland Ohio and has a Bachelor's degree in political science from
Lincoln University.
Shawn Eblen
Shawn Eblen has a MS degree in Bioscience and Biotechnology from Drexel University
and a BS degree in Microbiology from Auburn University.
He served nine years conducting research with the U.S Department’s of Agriculture’s
Agricultural Research Service before joining FDA six years ago. During this time,
Shawn worked extensively with the bacteria Listeria monocytogenses and Clostridium
botulinum to support CFSAN’s counter terrorism and retail food research programs.
Currently Shawn is a program manager for research coordination within the Office
of Science. Shawn also coordinates the FDA lab tours.
Mimi Cooper
Mimi Cooper is currently the Senior Middle Level Facilitator for the Science and
Our Food Supply Professional Development Program. She has served in this role since
the beginning of the program in 1999. She was also a member of the NSTA Expert Panel
that was part of the team that developed the curriculum - Science and Our Food Supply.
Mimi was a middle level classroom teacher in Peabody Massachusetts for twenty-eight
years. For five years she was a partner in the consulting firm - Northeast PALMS,
Inc. where she worked with elementary and middle level science and mathematics teachers
in their classrooms to implement inquiry-based curricula and with school systems
to align their curricula with state and national standards. Mimi received her undergraduate
degree from Wilkes University and her graduate degree from Boston College. She is
a member of the Massachusetts Hall of Fame of Science Teachers.
Elena Stowell
Elena Stowell is currently an assistant facilitator for the Science and our Food
Supply Professional Development Program. Elena teaches AP Biology at Kentwood High
School in Covington, Washington. She has been teaching high school science for fifteen
years. Elena received a BS in Biology from Washington State University and an MS
in Animal Science, also from WSU. Her graduate work in beef cattle nutrition included
the enzymatic characterization of the cellulolytic ruminal anaerobe Neocallimastix
frontalis EB188, a fungus she discovered. In 2000 Elena received the Outstanding
Biology Teacher Award for Washington state (by NABT) and her National Board Certification
(AYA Science) in 2001. In addition to her work with the Science and our Food Supply
Program, Elena is also a Science Education Partner in biotechnology with the Fred
Hutchinson Cancer Research Center (Seattle, WA), a teacher mentor, basketball coach
and mom.
Ken Bingman
Ken is currently in his 44th year of teaching. He is in his sixth year of teaching
Honors and AP Biology at Blue Valley High School in Overland Park, KS. Ken is the
High School Facilitator for the FDA/NSTA Science and Our Food Supply Program. He
was a member of the steering committee (1999) and the field tested the original
materials in 2001. Ken has been active in the development of educational programs
for thirty years. He has worked with NSTA, FDA, National Institutes of Health, Biological
Sciences Curriculum Study (BSCS), National Association of Biology Teachers (NABT),
JMH Education, New York, and the Kansas Board of Education. He was a committee member
to develop the National Science Education Standards and the Kansas Science Education
Standards. He was a Presidential Award Winner for Excellence in the Teaching of
Science in 1984. He was a Fulbright Memorial Fund Fellow to Japan in 1999. He was
named National Biology Teacher of the Year in 1998.
Ken has traveled to 25 countries as a delegation leader for the People to People
Student Ambassador Program. He was inducted into the Kansas Teachers Hall of Fame
in 1998. During the Kansas evolution controversy, Ken was featured in Time Magazine,
Globe Mail, and the Asahi Shimbum, a daily newspaper in Tokyo and he was on talk
programs on PBS, NPR, and MSNBC.
For more information contact symposia@nsta.org
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Underwritten in part by FDA |