Boca Raton student learns about international cooperation at institute
Published Sunday, September 30, 2007
by By Dale M. King
Between graduating last spring from Donna Klein Jewish Academy in
Boca Raton and moving on to Tufts University to study biomedical
engineering, Michael Vizner of Boca Raton spent four weeks at the
Dr. Bessie Lawrence International Summer Science Institute at the
Weizmann Institute of Sciences in Israel.
It was an eye-opening experience, he told the Boca Raton News by
phone from his dorm at the Massachusetts university.
“I got a taste of what it is like to work at a research institution,”
he said. “The coolest thing,” he added, was “to
see how the professional staff works with each other and how they
get along.”
“What I gained most,” he said, “was an understanding
of people,” and how researches from various nations work together
for a cause.
Vizner was one of 19 American scientist hopefuls chosen to take
part in the 39th annual summer institute. He joined 60 students
from around the world for scientific exploration at the institute
located in Rehovot, Israel.
While at the institute, “I was given a synthetic drug for
multiple sclerosis. My job was to help improve it.”
Actually, the summer of 2007 was the second time he worked on the
program. “I got into it last year while working at Florida
Atlantic University with Dr. Jang-Ken Wu.”
Admitting he’s still getting “settled in” at
Tufts, Vizner said he signed up for the biomedical engineering track.
“They will run me through all the engineering first,”
he said.
After that, he hopes to move on to molecular biology.
Michael is the son of Sam and Dana Vizner.
Each year, some 20 American students – or one in five of
the applicants – are accepted into the program. Eligibility
is based solel9y on the candidate’s abilities, said Jeffrey
Sussman, vice president of marketing, communications and public
affairs at the American Committee for the Weizmann Institute of
Science.
“Some of the most talented students in the U.S. are attracted
to the Weizmann Institute program,” he noted. “These
students, all high school seniors, are chosen based upon merit and
academic achievement.”
Sussman picked up on Vizner’s observation, noting that students
from around the world “experience the challenges and rewards
of working along side top professional scientific researchers at
one of the world’s leading basic science research centers.
At the same time, they learn about life in Israel.”
The final week of the program is spent at a field school in the
Judean Desert, near the Dead Sea. By observing ecology, geography,
climate, archaeology and other sciences in the field, Sussman said,
participants learn to formulate questions that they may eventually
explore in the laboratory.
Dale M. King can be reached at 561-549-0832 or at dking@bocanews.com.
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