Monthly Archives: February 2013

On biological modelling

#1 The Ribosome

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Let’s Get Stereotypes out of Science Education

Women are from Venus, like making cupcakes, like bright colours – particularly pink – and need to be told at frequent intervals that ‘math is meant to be hard’. That seems to be the verdict you could cull from many … Continue reading

Posted in education, Equality, physics, stereotype threat, teachers, Women in science | Comments Off on Let’s Get Stereotypes out of Science Education

(Talkin’ ’bout) my generation

Someone, somewhere, has been viewing my LinkedIn profile. I know this, see, because I’ve had a couple of calls and emails from various recruitment agencies, and I’ve seen that recruitment ‘specialists’ have left their footprints all over LinkedIn. One of … Continue reading

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Gantt charts, work plans and funding research

I spend four hours yesterday making a chart. Really. It was a Gantt chart. For those of you not familiar with a Gantt chart this is what they look like:

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Experiments, hypotheses, volcanoes, newtons and free downloads

It’s been an exciting week of experiments: in the lab and at home for my son’s school science fair—and for the psychology of marketing. But I’ll come to that later. Let’s start at the annual school science fair. An elementary … Continue reading

Posted in education, Research, science | Comments Off on Experiments, hypotheses, volcanoes, newtons and free downloads

Mind your language

I enjoy going to art galleries.  I enjoy looking at art and I can recall vividly the thrill of seeing the “Impressionists” in Paris for the first time.  For me, visiting a gallery is still something of an occasion and … Continue reading

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The Royal Institution: not time to move on

Less than a week after the Royal Institution announced that it was contemplating the sale of its historic home in Albermarle Street, Nature published an editorial criticising the 200 year old organisation for having lost its science communication mojo in … Continue reading

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Confidence and Confidentiality

I have a couple of tasks ahead of me which I am currently mulling over. The first is a talk I’m going to give to Newcastle University’s Women’s Network on Building Confidence, in which I’ve been asked to build on … Continue reading

Posted in anonymity, Blogging, Communicating Science, Science Culture, students | Comments Off on Confidence and Confidentiality

Response to House of Commons Committee Call for Evidence on Open Access

This week it is the turn of the House of Commons to investigate the UK policy on open access. No-one seems to be quite sure if they are co-ordinating things with the House of Lords, which was looking into this … Continue reading

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FREE BOOK !!!

Roll up, roll up, roll up – for today only (that’s 6 February 2013), you can download my book The Science of Middle-earth for FREE from the Amazon Kindle Store. Now, you might ask, how does it profit me to … Continue reading

Posted in business, Chris Anderson, FREE, hobbit, online, online business, the long tail, the lord of the rings, the science of middle earth, tolkien, Writing & Reading | Comments Off on FREE BOOK !!!