Cookies on this website

We use cookies to ensure that we give you the best experience on our website. If you click 'Accept all cookies' we'll assume that you are happy to receive all cookies and you won't see this message again. If you click 'Reject all non-essential cookies' only necessary cookies providing core functionality such as security, network management, and accessibility will be enabled. Click 'Find out more' for information on how to change your cookie settings.

Ludwig Oxford's Dr Tammie Bishop organised a week of work experience for fifteen year 12 students in collaboration with the Magdalen Outreach Team. University Research Lecturer Dr Tammie Bishop works in the laboratory led by 2019 Nobel Prize-winning Sir Peter Ratcliffe (Target Discovery Institute & Ludwig Institute for Cancer Research) which conducts research into hypoxia, as well as currently being involved in research into the role of hypoxia in SARS-CoV-2.

Scientist looking through a microscope

Dr Tammie Bishop organised a week of work experience for fifteen year 12 students in collaboration with the Magdalen Outreach Team.

University Research Lecturer Dr Tammie Bishop works in the laboratory led by 2019 Nobel Prize-winning Sir Peter Ratcliffe (Target Discovery Institute & Ludwig Institute for Cancer Research) which conducts research into hypoxia, as well as currently being involved in research into the role of hypoxia in SARS-CoV-2. Usually work experience would be held in the lab in person but this year it was successfully transferred into an online format, enabling students from across the country to take part.

The opportunity was offered by competitive application to students in Magdalen College’s seven link regions and participants joined from both the London and northern areas. The week involved lectures and workshops delivered by Tammie and her team (including Isobel Argles, Dr Thomas Keeley, Samvid Kurlekar and Maria Prange-Barczynska) as well as requiring students to produce their own work including presentations, experiment ideas and essays. 

Tammie said of the programme, ‘Students visit the lab each summer for work experience and we didn’t want them to miss out on this opportunity – COVID-19 or not! We came up with the idea of running a ‘remote’ work experience week as an alternative, to try to give students a taster for research and University life. The event was extremely fun and valuable for participants and organisers alike and we look forward to running it again next year.’

 The week introduced the group to the range of medical courses offered at Oxford including a Biomedicine and Medicine Q&A with Prof Rob Gilbert and a mock tutorial with Samvid Kurlekar. The group of students were also introduced to topics they hadn’t studied before such as the Hypoxia-Inducible Factor (HIF) pathway and recent work on the role of hypoxia in COVID-19. They even participated in a ‘live’ demonstration of lab work using cell cultures with Junior Research Fellow, Dr Thomas Keeley. As part of the week, they also received personalised essay and personal statement feedback to help them with their university applications.

One participant, Jana, said about the event, ‘I am very grateful for this fantastic opportunity as I have learnt so much within a week. The workshops, lectures, Q&A sessions, feedback and the work that has been set were very informative and interesting to me, where I was able to significantly benefit from and come out of this experience with some new knowledge- that is very exciting.’

Magdalen College Senior Outreach and Access Officer, Olivia Webster, said that ‘Worries about not having work experience is one of the main questions we’ve received from prospective applicants, especially applicants for Medicine, since lockdown begun. This is why the work experience Tammie and her team have provided is so vital and it was made even better by the fact our students from our northern schools could participate due to the digital format. We hope to continue this collaborative project in the years to come.’

More on Magdalen College Outreach on their website.

Similar stories

RECOVERY trial team wins the MRC Impact Prize

The Medical Research Council Prize Committee has awarded the RECOVERY trial team the MRC Impact Prize 2022 for Outstanding Team Impact.

Continued support to CPM helps it explore personalised medicine

The Dr Stanley Ho Medical Development Foundation will continue its funding support for The Centre for Personalised Medicine (CPM) for further seven years.

Shifting the needle: finding solutions for rare diseases

Rare diseases are a global health challenge. To address this, organisations around the world, including the Nuffield Department of Medicine (NDM), are working together to find solutions for patients.

Coronavirus Vaccines Research and Development Roadmap launched

The Coronavirus Vaccines Research and Development Roadmap is a comprehensive plan to galvanize a global effort to protect the world from this large and dangerous family of viruses.

Lithuanian Ambassador visits the Ludwig Institute for Cancer Research

The Lithuanian Ambassador to the United Kingdom, His Excellency Mr Eitvydas Bajarūnas, paid a visit to Professor Skirmantas Kriaučionis of the Ludwig Institute for Cancer Research at the Nuffield Department of Medicine.

Multidisciplinary dengue forecasting project launches in Vietnam

DART (Dengue Advanced Readiness Tools), is a new project supported by Wellcome to use climate data to better predict and prepare for infectious diseases outbreaks.