University of Washington: lessons include
- pasta genetics
- Cells and scale
-build an animal
-Toothpick Fish
-traits handout
-sickle cell anemia
-genetics of taste
Animated video walks students through a sickle cell anemia case study, guided by a genetic counselor, with breaks for questions and interactive responses.
Over the last decade, as DNA-sequencing technology has grown ever faster and cheaper, our understanding of the human genome has increased accordingly. Yet scientists have until recently remained largely ham-fisted when they've tried to directly modify genes in a living cell. Take sickle-cell anemia, for example. A debilitating and often deadly disease, it is caused by a mutation in just one of a patient's three billion DNA base pairs. Even though this genetic error is simple and well studied, researchers are helpless to correct it and halt its devastating effects.