| 2008-2009 A program conceived and organized by the Wisconsin Initiative for Science Literacy at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, with the collaboration of the Madison Metropolitan School District and the Edgewood Sonderegger Science Center. | 
  The Conversations in Science series brings together UW-Madison science researchers 
  and Dane County science teachers. Designed to stimulate discussion between scientists 
  and science educators at all levels, these conversations connect high-, middle-, 
  and elementary school classrooms with the University's cutting-edge research. 
  Questions and ideas are freely exchanged between expert and an audience of K-12 
  educators.
  
  ABOUT THE CONVERSATION
  
  The Great Lakes Bioenergy Research Center (GLBRC) is an emerging leader in using 
  interdisciplinary, genomics-based methods to build a biofuels economy. The GLBRC 
  is housed at the University of Wisconsin-Madison; working with university, national 
  laboratory and corporate partners. The GLBRC goals are to:
 To function as a center of excellence, the GLBRC will develop programs to 
  bring bioenergy breakthroughs to members of the agricultural and private sector; 
  stakeholders in the scientific, business, or academic community; and the public.
  
  ABOUT THE SPEAKER
  
  Tim Donohue is a Professor of Bacteriology, who has been a faculty member at 
  UW-Madison for over 20 years. During this time his research program has focused 
  on solar energy utilization by photosynthetic bacteria, studying the process 
  and control of photosynthesis and how cells divert the energy captured from 
  sunlight into different pathways. He has been a member of various federal research 
  panels, has served on several editorial boards and advisory committees in microbiology, 
  and helped author reports for the Department of Energy on solar energy generation 
  and the conversion of plant biomass into biofuels. He has experience in leading 
  cross-disciplinary research programs like the NIGMS Biotechnology Training Program. 
  More recently he has been named head of the Wisconsin Bioenergy Initiative and 
  the new DOE-funded Great Lakes Bioenergy Research Center. Click here 
  to visit his website.