This Course at MIT

This Course at MIT pages are part of the OCW Educator initiative, which seeks to enhance the value of OCW for educators.

Course Overview

This page focuses on the course 7.341 Designer Immunity: Lessons in Engineering the Immune System as it was taught by Dr. Gregory Szeto and Dr. Talar Tokatlian in Spring 2014.

This course was designed as a primary research article-based discussion/seminar course to explore landmark and cutting-edge advances in how engineering is being used in the field of immunology. The curriculum spanned the gamut from assays to clinical solutions to new mathematical modeling. Course sessions were conducted as open-ended discussions structured around the assigned literature, and instructors provided ad hoc guidance on the background and experimental details of all experiments and broader perspectives of the state of each field of research.

Course Outcomes

Course Goals for Students

The main objectives of this course were to introduce students to the primary scientific literature and the process of reading research publications, as well as to expose students to the rapidly developing field of engineering vaccines and immunotherapies.

Curriculum Information

Prerequisites (recommended)

Requirements Satisfied

None

Offered

Seminars are offered each semester and are topics based. This was the first time this specific course was offered. 

 

Instructor Insights

Below, Gregory Szeto and Talar Tokatlian describe various aspects of how they taught 7.341 Designer Immunity: Lessons in Engineering the Immune System.

Noteworthy features of the readings and assignments:

The purpose of the curriculum was to provide a broad and deep overview of the various interfaces of the fields of engineering and immunology, and articles were chosen to conform to thematic elements based on purpose of the research (e.g., development of new types of experimental techniques) or the type of engineering used (e.g., particle-based vaccines).

Within each section and session, contrasting approaches were presented to allow for discussion and comparison between articles.

Out-of-class opportunities for students to interact with course staff:

Complete open-access was given to students via email and Stellar course communications and forums.

Highlights:

Students seemed to really enjoy the course and actively participated in each session.

 

Assessment

The class was graded on a pass/fail basis, and grades were based on participation in discussion every week, satisfactory completion of the written and oral assignments, and attendance.

We assessed student learning by midterm and final assignments. Both were designed to assess the critical capacity of students to assimilate new knowledge in the form of primary literature style data. The midterm assignment tasked students with writing an abstract based on data and figures; this is a common way that articles are quickly assimilated/assessed for quality and message and this approach to generating an abstract forced some creative thinking and reverse engineering. In the final assignment, students presented and led a class discussion on an article of their choosing, allowing them to fully take the role of instructor and to demonstrate mastery over primary research article assimilation.

Student Information

On average, fewer than 10 students take this course each time it is offered.

Breakdown by Year

85% seniors, 15% juniors

Breakdown by Major

Electrical Engineering/Computer Science, Chemical Engineering, Biological Engineering, Biology

Typical Student Background

All students had previous exposure to lab in the form of UROP experience. One student had primarily computational biology exposure.

Enrollment Cap

Enrollment is capped at 12 students for the reasons mentioned below.

Ideal Class Size

The ideal class size is 6-10 students. This way there are enough students to balance the discussion, while not being too large and preventing students from speaking up to ask questions or make relevant comments.

 

How Student Time Was Spent

During an average week, students were expected to spend 6 hours on the course, roughly divided as follows:

Seminar Meeting

2 hours per week
  • Met once per week for 2 hours per session; 13 sessions total
  • Class time was spent discussing the assigned readings, and split approximately 50% to discuss each article in-depth
  • This typically allowed for approximately 10-20 minutes at the end of each session to discuss broader topics, thematic overviews, etc.
 

Out of Class

4 hours per week
 

Semester Breakdown

WEEK M T W Th F
1 No classes throughout MIT. No session scheduled. No session scheduled. No session scheduled. Seminar session held.
2 No session scheduled. No session scheduled. No session scheduled. No session scheduled. Seminar session held.
3 No classes throughout MIT. No session scheduled. No session scheduled. No session scheduled. Seminar session held.
4 No session scheduled. No session scheduled. No session scheduled. No session scheduled. Seminar session held.
5 No session scheduled. No session scheduled. No session scheduled. No session scheduled. Field trip.
6 No session scheduled. No session scheduled. No session scheduled. No session scheduled. Seminar session held.
7 No session scheduled. No session scheduled. No session scheduled. No session scheduled. Seminar session held; assignment due date.
8 No classes throughout MIT. No classes throughout MIT. No classes throughout MIT. No classes throughout MIT. No classes throughout MIT.
9 No session scheduled. No session scheduled. No session scheduled. No session scheduled. Seminar session held.
10 No session scheduled. No session scheduled. No session scheduled. No session scheduled. Seminar session held.
11 No session scheduled. No session scheduled. No session scheduled. No session scheduled. Seminar session held.
12 No classes throughout MIT. No classes throughout MIT. No session scheduled. No session scheduled. Seminar session held.
13 No session scheduled. No session scheduled. No session scheduled. No session scheduled. Seminar session held; student presentations.
14 No session scheduled. No session scheduled. No session scheduled. No session scheduled. No session scheduled.
15 No session scheduled. No session scheduled. No session scheduled. No session scheduled. No classes throughout MIT.
16 No classes throughout MIT. No classes throughout MIT. No classes throughout MIT. No classes throughout MIT. No classes throughout MIT.
Displays the color and pattern used on the preceding table to indicate dates when classes are not held at MIT. No classes throughout MIT
Displays the color used on the preceding table to indicate dates when seminar sessions are held. Seminar session
Displays the symbol used on the preceding table to indicate assignment due dates. Assignment due date
Displays the color used on the preceding table to indicate dates when no class session is scheduled. No class session scheduled
Displays the color used on the preceding table to indicate dates when field trips were held. Field trip
Displays the symbol used on the preceding table to indicate dates when student presentations were held. Student presentations
 

Course Team Roles

Instructors (Gregory Szeto and Talar Tokatlian)

Both instructors were equally involved in designing and implementing the course.

Talar brought an engineering focus, while Greg brought an in-depth immunology focus and knowledge of systems biology.