Fall 2020 Virtual Symposium: Training & Employment in Biotechnology
Engage with representatives from Montgomery College, Frederick Community College, and UMBC as well as local biotechnology industry leaders though our Training & Employment in Biotechnology virtual symposium!  This semester-long symposium will take place online (via Zoom) from 4:00 - 4:45 pm on select Monday afternoons throughout the fall semester.  Sessions will focus on a variety of topics relevant to supporting students who wish to pursue higher education and a future career in the biotechnology field. Please see below.

Please note that you will receive further communications as session topics and guest speakers are confirmed throughout the fall 2020 semester.  Following your submission of your RSVP, the Zoom link to these sessions will be provided via email a few days in advance of each session.

For accommodations, please contact Amma.Appiah@montgomerycollege.edu or Deborah.Chen@montgomerycollege.edu.
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Engage with UMBC TLST Students Completing Internships | Monday, November 16
Stephane Djoumessi - Interning at American Gene Technologies
Jackelyn Flores - Working in Cell Therapy Clinical Manufacturing
Attending 11/16? Please RSVP accordingly below: *
Virtual Viewing of the Award-Winning Documentary "Breakthrough" and Q&A with Dr. Jim Allison and Dr. Padmanee Sharma | Monday, November 30 > REGISTRATION REQUIRED

Please join the Beta Beta Beta Biological Society and Uncommon Productions for an exclusive virtual screening of the award-winning documentary Jim Allison: Breakthrough followed by a Q&A with Dr. Jim Allison and Dr. Padmanee Sharma on Monday, November 30th at 4pm EST. Sign up here: https://www.breakthroughdoc.com/tribeta.

Praised for its heartfelt and accessible storytelling of one warm-hearted scientist's quest to find a cure for cancer, Jim Allison: Breakthrough presents a new kind of hero —Dr. Jim Allison, who waged a decades-long struggle to bring a novel cancer treatment to patients worldwide. Breakthrough paints a richly entertaining portrait of Allison, a native of south Texas and an avid blues harmonica player, whose creativity and boundless curiosity about the human immune system set him on a trail-blazing path to change the face of cancer treatment and 2018 winner of the Nobel Prize.
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