Genetics Society of America Supports Symposia Organized by Student and Postdoc Members

September 04, 2015



Early careeer members plan workshops to broaden interest in genetics

Vancouver Worm Research Meeting (VanWoRM) Organizing Committee (from left to right): Jennifer Grants, Grace Goh, and Kwangjin Park

The Genetics Society of America (GSA) is pleased to announce the inaugural group of GSA Trainee-Organized Symposia, which are organized by student and postdoctoral members of the Society. These outstanding workshops will receive up to $2,000 in funding to cover direct meeting costs, such as speaker travel, facility rental, and promotion supplies. The goal of the GSA Trainee-Organized Symposia program is to advance knowledge, encourage exchange, foster new connections and collaborations, and further the mission of the Society by facilitating the efforts of our early career members to convene a group of people who share a common interest in a branch of genetics. Proposed workshops were evaluated based on their relevance to the GSA mission, the need for and the uniqueness of the event, the benefit to early career geneticists, and the availability of other relevant support. "We are delighted to be able to support our student and postdoc members as they take an important step in their career development through organizing local and regional events that will help serve the genetics community," said Adam P. Fagen, PhD, GSA's Executive Director. "GSA will continue to promote opportunities for our trainee members to assume leadership roles in the Society and in our field." The details of the GSA Trainee-Organized Symposia and their organizing committees are below.


The Vancouver Worm Research Meeting (VanWoRM) is a trainee-organized seminar series that unites C. elegans researchers in Vancouver, BC, for seminars and networking. VanWoRM convenes every other month, with the goal of establishing connections and sharing current research findings between C. elegans researchers at the University of British Columbia and Simon Fraser University. Furthermore, VanWoRM hosts a biennial Northwest Worm Meeting, inviting researchers from the University of Washington and Western Washington University to Vancouver for a day-long symposium. VanWoRM and the Northwest Worm Meeting cover a diverse range of topics representing the interests of ten Vancouver-based labs and five Washington-based labs, including stress and aging, genome stability, gene expression, developmental biology, and neurobiology. The VanWORM series is organized by Simon Fraser University graduate student Kwangjin Park in the Department of Molecular Biology and Biochemistry and University of British Columbia graduate students Jennifer Grants in the Department of Medical Genetics and Grace Goh in the Department of Cell and Developmental Biology.


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About the Genetics Society of America (GSA) The Genetics Society of America (GSA) is the professional scientific society that has represented the collective interests of individuals working to deepen out understanding of the living world by advancing the field of genetics since 1931. Its more than 5,500 members span all educational and professional levels and count 20 Nobel Laureates in their ranks. The Society promotes research and fosters communication through a number of GSA-sponsored conferences including regular meetings that focus on particular model organisms, and two peer-reviewed, peer-edited scholarly journals: GENETICS, which has published high quality original research across the breadth of the field since 1916, and G3: Genes|Genomes|Genetics, an open-access journal launched in 2011 to disseminate high quality foundational research in genetics and genomics. GSA demonstrates its deep commitment to education by sponsoring professional development and outreach activities to equip the next generation of scholars in the field. For more information about GSA, please visit www.genetics-gsa.org. To receive regular updates about the Society and its membership, follow GSA on Facebook and on Twitter @GeneticsGSA.


Original source: https://www.newswise.com/articles/genetics-society-of-america-supports-symposia-organized-by-student-and-postdoc-members