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Author Archives: Athene Donald
Research Culture, Fairness and Transparency
A week after the Science and University Ministers announced with respect to chartermarks such as Athena Swan “We have therefore asked the OfS, UKRI and NIHR to ensure that they place no weight upon the presence or absence of such … Continue reading
Posted in Equality, Science Culture
Tagged Athena Swan, BAME, grant-giving panels, Ottoline Leyser, UKRI
1 Comment
We’ve Come a Long Way But…..
When Rita Colwell was born in 1934, neither Oxford nor Cambridge Universities had yet appointed a female professor in any discipline; Dorothy Garrod, the first woman to hold such a chair (the Disney Chair of Archaeology at Cambridge), was not … Continue reading
Posted in Equality, Women in Science
Tagged Athena Swan, harassment, Ottoline Leyser, Rita Colwell
1 Comment
Feeling the Fear
Readers of the Guardian may, over the years, have had reason to dip into Oliver Burkeman’s columns. As he hangs up his metaphorical boots, he summarised what he had personally learned from the exercise of writing these ‘self-help’ articles. In … Continue reading
Posted in Science Culture
Tagged growth, Impostor syndrome, Oliver Burkeman, self-confidence
1 Comment
Investing in Education and the Levelling Up Agenda
Early years provision has suffered during austerity, and is continuing to see cutbacks, as Polly Toynbee pointed out last week. Yet children who fall behind at the outset of their education will find it very difficult to catch up later. … Continue reading
Posted in Education
Tagged Augar Review, Further Education, social mobility
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Pandemic Staycationing
As far as I’m concerned, this is not a year for travelling for a holiday. Indeed, given some of the recent events, there hasn’t even been time to take any sort of extended break. However, we have been taking days … Continue reading
Posted in Cambridge life
Tagged dreams, jackdaws, novels, ornithology
Comments Off on Pandemic Staycationing
