Press Release
Department of Human
Genetics
Eccles Institute of Human Genetics
University of Utah
5 June 2003
Contact: -- Jennifer
Logan, co-director, Genetic Science Learning Center
U OF UTAH GENETICS WEB SITE RANKS IN TOP 50
Genetic
Science Learning Center Site is Among Five Best in Biology
An
Internet web site operated by the University of Utah's Genetic Science Learning
Center has been honored by Scientific American magazine online as one of the
top 50 science and technology web sites, and as one of the top five biology
web sites.
" We're here to help people understand how bioscience research affects
their lives, and this type of recognition is a sign that we're making progress," said
Jennifer Logan, the center's co-director. "Our success is also a credit to
the talented Utah science teachers who help us develop website content, to
the University of Utah, and to the researchers here who provide the inspiration
for what we do."
Geneticist Ray Gesteland, the university's vice president
for research, called the honor "spectacular. It shows that these folks are
real professionals at genetics education, making it fun and interesting."
ScientificAmerican.com
announced its Sci-Tech Web Awards 2003 on May 27, including five web sites
in each of 10 categories, for a total of 50 sites. The magazine's online edition
described the Genetic
Science Learning Center website as
follows:
"Everything you ever wanted to know about chromosomes, mutations and
biowarfare, and even a few things you didn't! If your Bio 101's a little rusty,
have no fear - the University of Utah's got you covered with more than enough
info to transform you into a budding Watson or Crick in no time. To start, brush
up on genetic basics through their Flash-technology-enhanced interactive tour.
The site's crowning jewel? 'Click and Clone,' wherein you, via the wonders of
animation, actually replicate your own mouse."
The honor means that ScientificAmerican.com
considers the Genetic Science Learning Center site as among "50 of the best Web
resources for those seeking information on science and technology." This is the
third year the awards were issued by the magazine's online edition. The magazine
said it editors "reviewed over a thousand web sites and selected the 50 they
deemed the most valuable science and technology resources."
Logan says: "Science
on the net can be fun. Our site moves, it makes noise, and you might even find
out something useful while you're there."
The Genetic Science Learning Center
web site receives over 40,000 visits per week during the academic year, with
visitors from more than 100 nations.
University of Utah employees responsible
for building the web site are Logan; web developer Kevin Pompei; scientific illustrator
and animator Harmony Starr; postdoctoral fellow Mel Limson; education specialist
Molly Malone; Learning Center co-director Louisa Stark; and program assistant
Sharon Elliott.
The web site, which is open to free public access, is funded
by grants from the National Institutes of Health, the National Institute on Drug
Abuse and the Howard Hughes Medical Institute, along with start-up support from
the R. Harold Burton Foundation in Utah.