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End of the Year Stats
Most Visited Posts
1. Pardis Sabeti: Cool Super-Scientist
2. First Korean Astronaut Yi So-Yeon
3. Scientiae Carnival: Fools and Foolishness
4. Virologist Francoise Barre-Sinoussi
5. Invisible Computers
6. Jennifer Hooper McCarty on Colbert
7. 2008 L'Oreal UNESCO For Women in Science Awards
8. Interviews with Australian Scientists
9. Carla Schatz to Head Stanford Bio-X Program
10. New US Postage Stamp Honoring Scientist Gerty Cori
Top Search Terms
1. yi so-yeon/yi so yeon/so-yeon yi
2. http://sciencewomen.blogspot.com/
(there were a lot of these searches when Women in Science was made a Blogger Blog of Note)
3. pardis sabeti
4. women in science
5. jennifer hooper mccarty
6. françoise barré-sinoussi/francoise barre-sinoussi
7. carla schatz
8. kiss my math
9. women in science blog
10. elizabeth sulzman
Top referring Sites
(excluding Google, Stumbleupon, BlogCatalog and the like)
1. Blogger Blogs of Note
2. Female Science Professor
3. ScienceWomen
4. Scientiae Carnival
5. Shakesville
6. Blog Around The Clock
7. Thus Spake Zuska
8. Am I a woman scientist?
9. Khandaniha
10. Rants of a Feminist Engineer
Thanks for the links!
Top 10 Countries
Visits from the US outnumbered visits from Canada and the UK by a factor of ten.
1. United States
2. Canada
3. United Kingdom
4. India
5. Australia
6. Germany
7. Philippines
8. France
9. Netherlands
10. Malaysia
Top 10 Cities
Some of the cities were listed twice by Google Analytics. I've combined their numbers.
1. London, UK
2. New York, NY
3. Chicago, IL
4. Washington, DC
7. Sydney, Australia
5. San Francisco, CA
10. Seattle, WA
6. Cambridge, MA
8. Vancouver, Canada
9. Houston, TX
Brooklyn (NY), Champaign (IL), and Philadelphia (PA) were close behind.
Browser and OS
46% Internet Explorer
43% Firefox
8% Safari
79% Windows
18% Mac
3% Linux
Thanks to everyone who stopped by in 2008!
Happy New Year!
Over at Dr. Isis's place, people are sharing their shoes. My own footware leans towards the practical and boring - my go-to shoes for the winter are brown Mary Jane flats and black shoes with low chunky heels. Not worth blogging about, I don't think. But I will share with you my new slippers, which I have dubbed my Fifi-killers. They are both comfy and a bit odd, which is why I enjoy wearing them around the house. Thanks mom!
I'll be back to posting more regularly next week.
Have a fun and safe New Year's Eve!
* If you need the location of the slowest Burger King in Bakersfield, I'd be happy to share.
The Heart of the House
But Himself has a stubborn streak which combined with the ability to research anything inside and out allowed him to find someone in the next county who could provide an enclosed fireplace, stainless steel chimney and build whatever surround you want. They arrived for a quote, measured, bargained and set a delivery date. So in spite of the usual delays, our fireplace was installed in the centre of the house, and provides heat in three directions; to the living room, bedroom and hall.
It does a terrific job of heating the whole house (I think our maximum record is 32 degrees). Himself regularly reminds me of my initial skepticisim, to which I praise his wonderful idea and give thanks for his stubborn perseverance.
And of course our chimney provides access for Santa Claus. The Brown-eyed Girl dismissed the idea of him being able to get past a locked door but was very taken with the image of him unhooking the fireplace door from the inside and climbing out to deposit the presents under the tree. It's an advantage I admit we overlooked in our research into fireplaces...
The Heart of the House
But Himself has a stubborn streak which combined with the ability to research anything inside and out allowed him to find someone in the next county who could provide an enclosed fireplace, stainless steel chimney and build whatever surround you want. They arrived for a quote, measured, bargained and set a delivery date. So in spite of the usual delays, our fireplace was installed in the centre of the house, and provides heat in three directions; to the living room, bedroom and hall.
It does a terrific job of heating the whole house (I think our maximum record is 32 degrees). Himself regularly reminds me of my initial skepticisim, to which I praise his wonderful idea and give thanks for his stubborn perseverance.
And of course our chimney provides access for Santa Claus. The Brown-eyed Girl dismissed the idea of him being able to get past a locked door but was very taken with the image of him unhooking the fireplace door from the inside and climbing out to deposit the presents under the tree. It's an advantage I admit we overlooked in our research into fireplaces...
Happy Holidays!
Women in Science Link Roundup: December 21 Edition
Life as a Woman Scientist
There have been a bunch of interesting posts at the Praxis "academic life" blog carnival. Both Praxis #4 at The Lay Scientist and Praxis #5 at Effortless Incitement include links discussing women in science.
Several recent posts at Inside Higher Ed's Mama, PhD blog have generated a lively blog discussion.
- Libby Gruner @ Mama PhD: Mothering at Mid-Career: Climbing the Lattice
- Tedra Osell @ Mama PhD: Career Coach: Riding the Waves
- Geeky Mom: Ladders, lattices, mothering and all that shit
- 11D: Professor Mom
- Professing Mama: Only the Lonely
- Profgrrrrl: perfect timing for motherhood?
- Libby Gruner @ Mama PhD: Mothering at Mid-Career: More work on weaving the lattice
Bios and Awards
FGJ at the Feministing Community lists women in math and science she looks up to, and asks commenters to talk about their own favorite women scientists.
Ellen Kullman was named CEO of chemical giant DuPont. She is the first woman to lead a major public US chemical firm (via Jenn at Fairer Science).
The November HHMI Bulletin profiles biochemist Judith Kimble
The New York Times interviewed Renee Reijo Pera, professor of obstetrics and gynechology and director of Stanford's Center for Human Embryonic Stem Cell Research and Education
Stereotypes
Draw-A-Scientist Test: from seventh graders visiting Fermilab to adults in New York City's Madison Square Park, scientists are white and male.
Vince LiCata: "When Britney Spears Comes to My Lab"
In case you missed last month's discussion about women scientists, femininity and the double standard, you should read these posts and their comments:
- Dr. Isis at On Becoming a Domestic and Laboratory Goddess: On the need for women to defend women
- Zuska at Thus Spake Zuska: The Proper Way to Be a Woman in Science
- Janet at Adventures in Ethics and Science: Women, scientists, and ordinary human beings
Gender Gap
ScienceWoman has a list of ways to recruit women and minorities in a faculty search, and opens the comments to suggestions.
DrugMonkey rounds up the posts on the latest lack-of-gender-diversity-in-science discussion to make the blog rounds. There are also comments on those post, lots and lots of comments.
New York Times: What has driven women out of computer science?
Jenn @ FairerScience: Women and the Video Game Industry
FemaleScienceProfessor: Scientifiques avec Quelques Frontiéres (conference literature translated from French that states scientists are men), More Diverse Award Issues,
Mind Hacks: Shaking the foundations of the hidden bias test
Ilyka at Off Our Pedestals: Gosh, you ladies sure are touchy about Larry Summers! Or: Still assy after all these years
Feministing: The under-representation of female cardiologists
Fictional Women in STEM
The LA Times looked at the appeal of the characters on NCIS, including Pauley Perrette as forensic specialist Abby Sciuto. Perrett was working on her master's degree in criminal science when she decided to become a full-time actor.
Jessica Alba is currently filming An Invisible Sign of My Own:The film is a coming-of-age drama based on Aimee Bender's quirky novel about a 20-year-old loner named Mona Gray (Alba) who as a child turned to math for salvation after her father became ill. As an adult, Gray now teaches the subject and must help her students through their own crises.
In Frank Miller's movie adaptation of The Spirit, the character of Silken Floss has been "demoted" from nuclear physicist/surgeon to secretary. The original version too threatening perhaps? Hopefully she won't spend the whole movie pining for her boss.
Tags: women in science
Jane Lubchenco to Head NOAA?
Lubchenco is a marine biologist who specializes in the study marine ecosystems and how humans affect them. She has been actively involved in environmental policy issues, and has testified both at the state level and before congress about the creation of marine sanctuaries and climate change. She is also one of the founders and principals of COMPASS (Communication Partnership for Science and the Sea), which works to solve marine environmental problems by communicating scientific knowledge to policymakers, the public and the media. For those efforts she received the AAAS Public Understanding of Science and Technology Award.
Also of interest is a 1993 article she wrote about being one half of two-scientist couple for BioScience. The solution that she and her husband came to was to split a position: each of them held a half-time, tenure-track faculty position, which allowed both of them to teach, do research, and spend time with their young children. In the article she argued for creating more such positions to increase the number of women who pursue science careers:
The most difficult time in a faculty member's life is usually the time during which one is an assistant professor, struggling to teach courses that come up ton one's ideals, to challenge and educate students, to establish one's own research program, to obtain funding, to publish, and generally to prove oneself. If this period coincides with having young children (which for biological reasons is often the case for women), the time can be even more difficult. Even if highly ambitious, driven women and men mange ot juggle all of these demands, the messages they send to graduate students and undergraduates appear to frighten away many outstanding potential scientists. Moreover, if individuals wish to spend more time with their children than full-time positions allow, academia offers virgually no viable options.She does acknowledge that not everyone would be interested in such a position, but that many women (and men) would, and that it should be made an option. Obviously it worked for her. She talks more about the difficulty she and her husband had in balancing their academic careers in a 2004 interview at the National Academy of Sciences.
I think it's exciting that the new head of the NOAA is a working scientist, a strong advocate for the environment, and someone who has been heavily involved in public policy issues, which I assume means she understands how the system "works". Definitely good news!
Related information:
- Jane Lubchenco "Advocates for Science: The Role of Academic Environmental Scientists" (video)
- Jane Lubchenco on Science Debate 2008 (vide0
- Jane Lubchenco: "Climate Change and its Implications for Oregon" (video)
- Mother Jones Radio: Jane Lubchenco
- National Academy of Science: InterViews
- AAAS Award for Public Understanding of Science & Technology
- Scripps Nierenberg Prize for promotion of science in the public interest
International Year of Astronomy 2009: "She is An Astronomer"
Promoting gender equality and empowering women is one of the United Nations Millennium Development Goals. She Is An Astronomer will promote gender equality in astronomy (and science in general), tackling bias issues by providing a web platform where information and links about gender balance and related resources are collected.To that end, there is already an She is an Astronomer Facebook Group. I'm not sure if this is going to be the only forum or one of several, but it already has a bit of discussion about gender equality and astronomy going.The aim of the project is to provide neutral, informative and accessible information to female professional and amateur astronomers, students, and those who are interested in the gender equality problem in science. We believe that providing this information will help increase the interest of young females to study and pursue a career in astronomy.
An objective of the project is to build and maintain an internet based, easy-to-handle forum and database, where people regardless of geographical location can read about the subject, ask questions and find answers. There will also be the option to discuss astronomy sector specific problems, such as observing times and family duties.
There aren't many details as yet, but apparently there will also be lectures and workshops all over the world in conjunction with the project. I only found a couple of related events by Googling:
- Saturday, January 31 @ the Royal Observatory in Greenwich, UK: She's an Astronomer: Venus and the Moon
- Tuesday, May 19 @ The Hokulani Imaginarium at Windward Community College in Kaneohe, HI : "She is An Astronomer" Symposium for middle and high school girls
There is also a Women in Astronomy resource guide (pdf)
(tip of the hat to the Bad Astronomer for the link to the SIAA Facebook Group)
Tags: women in astronomy, International Year of Astronomy, She is An Astronomer
Top Women Scientists of 2008
Anne Wojcicki and Linda Avey, co-founders of biotech startup 23andMe were among Popular Mechanics' "The Internet's Top 10 Most Controversial Figures of 2008"
Discover named Senator Barbara Mikulski, chairwoman of the Subcommittee on Commerce, Justice, and Science as one of the "10 most influential people in science". No, she's not a scientist herself, but she regularly fights for federal science funding.
Discover named University of Alaska ecologist Katey Walter, Harvard stem cell biology Amy Wagers, UC Berkeley molecular biologist Nicole King, and MIT astrophysicist Sara Seager among the "20 best brains under 40"
Discover named Anastasia Roda, 19, and Isha Jain, 17, both of Pennsylvania, among their "Teen Genius: 5 Promising Scientists under 20"
Seed profiles physicist and systems biologist Aleksandra M. Walczak, virologist Ilaria Capua , geneticist Heejung Kim, user of "astronomical medicine" Michelle Borkin, and materials scientist Neri Oxman, in their feature on 2008's Revolutionary Minds
Popular Science profiled materials scientist Kristi Anseth, neuroscientist Rebecca Saxe, and chemist Melanie Sanford, in their Brilliant 10 Class of 2008
Tags: women in science
50% off Nobel Prize Women in Science
Since 1901 there have been over three hundred recipients of the Nobel Prize in the sciences. Only ten of them - about 3 percent - have been women. Why?Maybe I'm too cynical, but I find the part of the description that suggests that every one of those women was "joyful" offputting. Women scientists are human, and so certainly have the ability to be both brilliant and unhappy. And "joyful" itself seems to me to be a gendered term - I would find it odd to hear it applied to Albert Einstein or James Watson.
In this updated version of Nobel Prize Women in Science , Sharon Bertsch McGrayne explores the reasons for this astonishing disparity by examining the lives and achievements of fifteen women scientists who either won a Nobel Prize or played a crucial role in a Nobel Prize - winning project. The book reveals the relentless discrimination these women faced both as students and as researchers. Their success was due to the fact that they were passionately in love with science.
The book begins with Marie Curie, the first woman to win the Nobel Prize in physics. Readers are then introduced to Christiane Nusslein-Volhard, Emmy Noether, Lise Meitner, Barbara McClintock, Chien-Shiung Wu, and Rosalind Franklin. These and other remarkable women portrayed here struggled against gender discrimination, raised families, and became political and religious leaders. They were mountain climbers, musicians, seamstresses, and gourmet cooks. Above all, they were strong, joyful women in love with discovery.
Nobel Prize Women in Science is a startling and revealing look into the history of science and the critical and inspiring role that women have played in the drama of scientific progress.
But maybe the book really does give well-rounded profiles of these exceptional women scientists. And perhaps they really all did have happy lives. That would be nice to believe.
Tags: Nobel Prize, women in science
Geophysicists in Antarctica
The International Polar Year is a scientific program focused on the Arctic and Antarctic that runs through March of 2009. One of the projects is studying the Antarctic's remote Gamburtsev Mountains which are buried under several miles of ice. The American team's leader is Columbia University marine geophysicist Robin Bell.
The project has daunting-seeming logistical issues, from extreme cold to complete isolation. As Bell wrote for Scientific American:
To study these hidden mountains, we will work from two camps. The southern camp is almost 800 miles (1,285 kilometers) from McMurdo, the main U.S. station, more than the distance between New York City and Chicago—only there are no highways, rest areas or gas stations along the way, just miles and miles of ice. Our northern camp is 470 miles (755 kilometers) inland and is closer to the Australian and Chinese bases on the northern edge of the ice sheet. Where we're working, there will be no penguins and no tourists, just ice, scientists, engineers, pilots, medics, cooks and mountaineers.Not only is it very very cold, but the elevation is high enough to cause physical problems. Adrienne Block, a graduate student working on the project blogged about it a few days ago:
For several years, we have been puzzling over the logistics. How can a multinational team (of more than 25 scientists and engineers with three aircraft) cram an expedition into the very short time that the weather is warm enough for us to work? "Warm enough" means the temperature is warmer than –58 degrees F (–50 degrees C).
Part of my jitteriness the last few days is undoubtedly rooted in the fact I’ll be going to the South Pole on Monday. According to our medical briefing, that means I’ll be perpetually short of breath, having trouble sleeping and going to the bathroom about every 20 minutes for 2 days…. The anticipation is almost too much to hold in! I have been to 10,000ft elevation before but that was after living at 6,500ft above sea level for 5 weeks… and that was in Utah. The transition from sea level here in McMurdo to 10,000ft is such a surprise to the system that everyone is prescribed a medication to help our bodies adjust to the lower oxygen levels. On top of that, we all have to fight off the adrenaline brought on by the fact we’re in Antarctica, at The South Pole, at 10,000ft—no offense to Utah, but it doesn’t compare! Just in case we don’t adjust to the elevation, everyone has been learning tasks outside their specialty. Hopefully, if someone gets sick, we’ll be able to keep the science moving forward, even if at a slower pace.But the scientists aren't completely isolated from the rest of humanity. You can follow Robin Bell on Twitter or join the XTREME South Facebook group for the latest information about the team's progress.
You can also read the blogs of other women scientists currently working in the Antarctic:
- Andrea Balbas, undergraduate in geology at CUNY, who is collecting data about seafloor sediments
- Adrienne Block, a PhD student at Columbia University who is working on Bell's team
- Beth Burton, geophysicist with the US Geologica Survey
- Zoe Courville, a PhD in materials science who works as a research mechanical engineer at Cold Regions Research and Engineering Lap in New Hampshire
- Saffia Hossainzadeh, undergraduate in physics at the University of Chicaco, who is studying the motion of ice streams
- Jean Pennycook, high school science teacher and penguin researcher
- Video webcast with Robin Bell on EXPLO.TV, Dec. 7, 2008 (scroll down to "Hidden Mountains" or click here: Real 256K )
- Robin E. Bell: "Dispatches from the Bottom of the Earth: An Antarctic Expedition in Search of Lost Mountains Encased in Ice" in Scientific American
- Dispatches From the Bottom of the Earth posts at Scientific American 60-Second Science
Christmas is coming....
Some very smart retailer had the bright idea at some point in the last twenty years or so, that if Turkey hijacked all the trimmings of Christmas, held them captive for a week and forced them to do overtime for New Year, he might make a fortune. So we have Christmas trees, gift-giving, house decorating, turkey-eating and even Santa Claus himself, in the guise of Noel Baba, all in aid of the New Year. This 'tradition' being relatively new it's not always upheld by everyone, so Noel Baba comes to some children, trees may go up but gifts aren't exchanged and so on. It was a cunning plan and is working terrifically.
It works great for me too, I get all the Christmas cheer, minus carol singing and nativity scenes, from the local shops. My mother, bless, sends the pudding and mince meat and this year I'm attempting a Christmas cake in addition to the usual turkey dinner and trifle.
There is only one small snag, it has created a tremendous mix up in the minds of many Turks, they don't know that Christmas is not New Year. This is aided by dodgy translation of movies and sitcoms where Yeni Yil is substituted for Christmas, causing me to jump up and down and rant at the television. (At which point the Brown-eyed Girl informs me that the television can't hear. Smart girl, a little too smart perhaps.)
So there will be a debate at some point about whether good Muslims should celebrate a Christian feast, regardless of the fact that New Year isn't a Christian feast and that the said Christian feast happened a week earlier. I wonder how they'd feel if they knew that celebrating the New Year has its roots in paganism before being fixed on January 1 by the Romans?
Christmas is coming....
Some very smart retailer had the bright idea at some point in the last twenty years or so, that if Turkey hijacked all the trimmings of Christmas, held them captive for a week and forced them to do overtime for New Year, he might make a fortune. So we have Christmas trees, gift-giving, house decorating, turkey-eating and even Santa Claus himself, in the guise of Noel Baba, all in aid of the New Year. This 'tradition' being relatively new it's not always upheld by everyone, so Noel Baba comes to some children, trees may go up but gifts aren't exchanged and so on. It was a cunning plan and is working terrifically.
It works great for me too, I get all the Christmas cheer, minus carol singing and nativity scenes, from the local shops. My mother, bless, sends the pudding and mince meat and this year I'm attempting a Christmas cake in addition to the usual turkey dinner and trifle.
There is only one small snag, it has created a tremendous mix up in the minds of many Turks, they don't know that Christmas is not New Year. This is aided by dodgy translation of movies and sitcoms where Yeni Yil is substituted for Christmas, causing me to jump up and down and rant at the television. (At which point the Brown-eyed Girl informs me that the television can't hear. Smart girl, a little too smart perhaps.)
So there will be a debate at some point about whether good Muslims should celebrate a Christian feast, regardless of the fact that New Year isn't a Christian feast and that the said Christian feast happened a week earlier. I wonder how they'd feel if they knew that celebrating the New Year has its roots in paganism before being fixed on January 1 by the Romans?
Women in Science Holiday Gift Guide
"This is what a scientist looks like" T-shirts
YellowIbis.com carries a great selection of science-themed T-shirts, including the "this is what a scientist looks like" women's Tee, pictured at left. It also comes in a Junior cap-sleeve style. The design is fully customizable, so you can replace "scientist" with "physicist" or "chemist" or "engineer". ScienceWoman modeled one of the shirts on her blog, so you can see what it looks like on a human.
Part of my Scienceblogs swag was a limited-edition Sciencewomen T-shirt, which I believe also came from Yellow Ibis. The quality is good and it seems to run true to size.
Their Last Minute Sale runs through tomorrow, December 15th, so if you order promptly you can get $5 off orders of $13+.
Science-themed jewelry
My favorite science-related jewelry is by Made With Molecules (and I've alerted Santa of that fact). There's something to suit every chemical taste: you could chose the fairly simple dopamine and caffeine necklaces and earrings, the elegant "red wine" resveratrol and garnet necklace, or have your name or other message spelled out in amino acids. It's like fate that one of the examples of peptide jewelry spells out "PEGGY" (at right).
I also like NB Design's silver jewelry, such as the Erlenmeyer flask pendant shown at left.
And for more colorful items I like Surly-Ramics "Smart Jewelry", such as the "science is sexy" pendant (at right).
Science Art
If jewelry isn't your (or your giftee's) cup of tea, you might consider science-themed art.
Tiffany Ard's colorful "art for nerds and nurseries" would indeed be perfect for a nursery or kid's room. But I like their whimsical look too. Shown at left: detail from "I love love LOVE my microscope". Right: detail from "Newton's Laws of Motion".
Our galaxy is colorful too, and I think photos of nebulae, planets and stars are also works of art. Shown at left: The Orion Nebula from Fletcher Photos.
Books, books and more books
Despite all the nice T-shirts, art and jewelry out there, my usual go-to gifts are books (and they make up the bulk of my own wish list too)!
I've put together an Amazon.com store, so it's easy to find books about women in science. I've split them into four categories:
- Books about women in science and mathematics
- Biographies and history
- Books for girls
- Fiction featuring women scientists (literary fiction, murder mysteries, and science fiction)
So obviously these are suggestions based on my own taste. Do you have other suggestions or an Etsy store? Leave a comment!
(Please only leave links to sciency items, or items scientists might especially like. There are plenty of other web sites that discuss gifts in general. I'll be using my judgment to delete comments I think are spam.)
Tags: gifts, women in science
Lucy Shapiro: Mentor
"The most fundamental thing a mentor can do for a lab is to help to maximize a lab's productivity," Shapiro says. "That's based on creating an environment of collaboration and respect."She set the tone by allowing people in her lab to work to their strengths, provides projects for students that should show rapid success, provides fast feedback, and carefully follows the progress of everyone in her lab. And in what I suspect is a crucial ingredient to her success, she also carefully screens people who are interested in joining her lab, taking into account the opinions of her students and postdocs.
Read the full article for more details.
Tags: mentoring, Lucy Shapiro
2009 L'Oreal-UNESCO Women in Science Awards
Diverse in origin, determined in nature, and extraordinary in intellect, the 2009 Laureates reflect the programme’s mission: to change the face of science and support the advancement of women in the scientific field. The Awards Ceremony will take place on 5 March 2009, at UNESCO. Each Laureate will receive $100,000 in recognition of her contribution to science.The winner for Africa & the Arab States is Tebello Nyokong, Professor of Medicinal Chemistry and Nanotechnology in the Department of Chemistry at Rhodes University in South Africa. Nyokong received her PhD from the University of Western Ontario, Canada and was a Fulbright Scholar at the University of Notre Dame. Her research focuses on the poryphyrins, which can be used as photosensitive drugs for cancer treatment, photosensitizers for photochemical destruction of pollutants in water, and in the development of sensors for biologically and medically important molecules.
Related information:
- "No Ordinary Scientist" Mail & Guardian online, Aug. 13 1008.
this article tells Nyokong's story, from growing up in Lesotho as a shepherd, to eventually choosing to pursue a career in chemistry, and her recent successes and awards. There is also an 2004 article in the same paper: "From shepherdess to scientific star" - "Nyokong wins Prestigious L' Oreal-Unesco Award for Woman in Science", official Rhodes University Press Release
Related Information:
- Nihon University Press Release (in Japanese). Here's the Google translated version in English.
The winner for North America was Eugenia Kumacheva, Canada Research Chair in Advanced Polymer Materials in the Department of Chemistry at the University of Toronto, and the first Canadian to win the award. Kumacheva received her PhD at the Institute of Physical Chemistry (Russian Academy of Sciences). Her research group works on the development of "novel nanostructured polymer-based materials" and studies "equilibrium and dynamic forces in thin layers of polymer films." The polymers have many applications, including high density optical data storage and drug delivery.
Related information:
- "U of T professor first Canadian woman to win prestigious international science prize", Official University of Toronto press release
- 2004 Canadian Society for Chemistry Clara Benson Award
- 2005 Chemical Institute of Canada Macromolecular Science and Engineering Award
- "Paint Based on Quantum Dots has Potential to Assist Antiterrorism and Cancer Detection"
Related Information:
- "Cambridge physicist wins top award", official University of Cambridge Press Release
- "Major science award goes to British woman 'role model'" The Observer, 16 Nov. 2008. Donald is quoted as saying:
'Having very visible, successful women who have not become complete anoraks is really important to keep girls doing science. They are put off it; they think they can't have a family and be a successful scientist. There are all these myths, but if you can show it is possible to succeed and be relatively normal, that's a hugely important message,'
- Radio 4 Woman's Hour: Top prize for female physicist
- Royal Society 2006 Bakerian Prize Lecture: "The mesoscopic world"
Related information:
- "Perfil: Gente do céu", sinapse online (in Portuguese)
- Barbuy wins Trieste Science Prize
- International Astronomical Union profile
The Women That Stay: What are your suggestions
We want to hear from readers about the programs that have made a difference in women's careers in science. From mentors to creative day care solutions to government grants that made going back to lab easier, we want to know about the things that have had the biggest impact in women's lives. We'll use your suggestions in a Careers article for women in science.There aren't many comments as yet, so go add your thoughts.
Tags: women in science, gender gap
You Didn't Think You Could Win, Did You?
- women who presented themselves as confident and ambitious were viewed as highly competent, but lacking social skills
- women who present themselves as modest and cooperative, were well liked but perceived as having low competence
- confident and ambitious men were perceived as both competent and likable and were more likely to be hired
The effect is that I feel that, as a woman, I have to dance the line between being confidently assertive and self-effacingly modest. And it doesn't help that the line moves, requiring a shift from the self-deprecation that's expected in many social situations to the confident self-promotion required when asking for recognition or a raise - or applying for a grant. It makes me wonder what role this might play in the "leak" of women from the academic pipeline.
In the December 5 issue of Science, Ley and Hamilton look at the differences between NIH grant application and success rates between men and women. They found a striking drop in applications by women for basic research grants for independent facutly positions as compared to grant application for postdocs. They concluded that this is likely due to women leaving the academic pipeline :
Although some female career attrition could be due to cohort effects (i.e., smaller numbers of female graduate students in the past, leading to smaller numbers at advanced career stages at this time) the effects that we describe here occur in a very narrow time frame and are far too large to be totally explained by this phenomenon. Instead, the data strongly suggest that a large fraction of women are choosing to leave the NIH-funded career pipeline at the transition to independence (i.e., in the late postdoctoral and early faculty years). Female physician-scientists make this decision earlier and more often, perhaps because more attractive and/or flexible career options (e.g., clinical practice) are available to them. Men and women have near-equal NIH funding success at all stages of their careers, which makes it very unlikely that female attrition is due to negative selection from NIH grant-funding decisions.It's worth noting that the "near-equal" funding success the mention is actually a small but statistically significant difference in favor of male applicants. The long-term result is that women principal investigators are significantly less likely to have funded NIH Research Project Grants than their male colleagues.
There's an interesting discussion of the article going on over at Blue Lab Coats. One of the commenters there points out that the statistics show the average NIH award size is less for women than men (pdf. See Table 3.4 p.28). That likely has to do with women asking for less money than male applicants, and I believe part of the reason why is that there are negative social consequences for women who are perceived as overly aggressive in asking for what they want.
Of course that is only one of many possible reasons for the gender gap in academic science. There is the issue of women being expected to take the bulk of responsibilities for child care and housework. And, of course, everyday sexism. See the discussion going on at DrugMonkey's blog and Dr. Isis's response for more.
References:
Ley TJ and Hamilton BH. "The Gender Gap in NIH Grant Applications" Science 5 December 2008: Vol. 322 no. 5907 pp.1472-1474. DOI: 10.1126/science.1165878
Hosek SD et al. "Technical Report: Gender Differences in Major Federal External Grant Programs." (2005)
* which I know isn't a good way to judge a study, but it's all I've got since I don't have access to the actual data.
** And I'm not forgetting the more stereotypically feminine Sarah Palin, who was given the sexy-but-dumb treatment. There were many reasons to criticize Palin as a VP candidate, but I think the sexist commentary was uncalled for.
Tags: gender gap, women in science
Montreal Massacre
One of the students, Nathalie Provost, said, "Look, we are just women studying engineering, not necessarily feminists ready to march on the streets to shout we are against men, just students intent on leading a normal life." Lépine responded that "You're women, you're going to be engineers. You're all a bunch of feminists. I hate feminists."Lepine opened fire, killing six women and wounding three others. He then continued shooting as he walked through the building, leaving 14 dead and 14 wounded.
The victims:
- Geneviève Bergeron (born 1968), civil engineering student.
- Hélène Colgan (born 1966), mechanical engineering student.
- Nathalie Croteau (born 1966), mechanical engineering student.
- Barbara Daigneault (born 1967), mechanical engineering student.
- Anne-Marie Edward (born 1968), chemical engineering student.
- Maud Haviernick (born 1960), materials engineering student.
- Maryse Laganière (born 1964), budget clerk in the École Polytechnique's finance department.
- Maryse Leclair (born 1966), materials engineering student.
- Anne-Marie Lemay (born 1967), mechanical engineering student.
- Sonia Pelletier (born 1961), mechanical engineering student.
- Michèle Richard (born 1968), materials engineering student.
- Annie St-Arneault (born 1966), mechanical engineering student.
- Annie Turcotte (born 1969), materials engineering student.
- Barbara Klucznik-Widajewicz (born 1958), nursing student.
More at Sciencewomen.
Image: Plaque commemorating the victims of the massacre at École Polytechnique.
Tags: Montreal Massacre, women in engineering
Open Laboratory 2008 Submissions
There are a number of women science bloggers who have entries, including:
- Samia at 49 percent
- Heather Etchevers at A Developing Passion
- Kate at A K8, A Cat, A Mission
- Mad Hatter at A Mad Tea-Party
- a poem by MissPrism at A Somewhat Old and Capacious Handbag
- Rebecca at Adventures in Applied Math
- Janet Stemwedel at Adventures in Ethics and Science
- Tara Smith at Aetiology
- Kim Hannula at All of My Faults are Stress-Related
- Bee at Back Reaction
- Erika Cule at Blogging the PhD
- Corie Lok at Boston blog
- Bug Girl's Blog
- Heather McDougal at Cabinet of Wonders
- Jennifer Ouellette at Cocktail Party Physics
- Julie Craves at Coffee and Conservation
- Kristin Stephan at Coffee Talk
- Damn Good Technician's blog
- Dara Sosulski's blog
- Julianne Dalcanton at Cosmic Variance,
- chall at Dreams and hopes of a (post doc) scientist
- Dr. Jeckyll & Mrs. Hyde
- PhD Mom at Dr. Mom, My Adventures as a Mom my Scientist
- Dr. Petra Boynton
- Eva Amsen at Expression Patterns
- Pat at Fairer Science
- FemaleScienceProfessor
- Maria Brumm at Green Gabbro
- Barn Owl at Guadalupe Storm-Petrel
- Alethea at Humans in Science
- ilovebacteria.com
- Dr. Isis at On Becoming a Domestic and Laboratory Goddess (old blog and current home at scienceblogs.com)
- KH at Lecturer Notes
- Sheri at Life, Birds, and Everything
- GrrlScientist at Living the Scientific Life (Scientist, Interrupted)
- Tuff Cookie at Magma Cum Laude
- Jennifer Rohn at Mind the Gap
- post-doc at Minor Revisions
- Scicurious at Neurotic Physiology
- Scicurious at Neurotopia v. 2.0
- Christie Lynn at Observations of a Nerd
- Shelley Batts at Of Two Minds
- Mary Jo Rhodes at Over Land, Under Sea
- El Fields at Panthera Studentessa
- PodBlack at PodBlack Cat
- Anne-Marie at pondering pikaia
- Mimi at Potspoon!
- SkookumChick at Rants of a feminist engineer
- Cath Ennis at rENNISance woman
- steffi suhr at Science behind he scenes
- ScienceWoman and Alice Pawley at Sciencewomen
- Jane at See Jane Compute
- Karen James at The Beagle Project Blog
- Bean-Mom at The Bean Chronicles
- Kristi Vogel at The Gulf Stream
- A Life Long Scholar at The Musings of a Life-Long Scholar
- Mary at The Open Helix Blog
- Miriam Goldstein at The Oyster's Garter
- Olivia Judson at The Wild Side
- AcmeGirl at Thesis - with Children
- Zuska at Thus Spake Zuska
- Pamela Ronald at Tomorrow's Table for Nature
Some of the entries relevant to women in STEM:
- 49 percent. : She said to no one in particular
- A Blog Around the Clock: The Future is Here and it is Bright: Interview with Anne-Marie Hodge
- A k8, a cat, a mission: Providing and Nurturing
- A Mad Tea-Party: Birds of a Feather?
- Adventures in Ethics and Science: Girls, boys, and math.
- Almost Diamonds: Diversity Now
- Coffee Talk: what motherhood has taught me
- Drug Monkey: It Doesn't Hurt a Bit to Be "That Guy"
- FemaleScienceProfessor: The Best Woman...
- Irene Suarez at Nano2Hybrids: Girly Girls in Science
- Neuroanthropology: Girls closing math gap?: Troubles with intelligence #1
- PodBlack Cat: She's Already Got Science - Women, Skepticism and the Need for More Research
- Rants of a feminist engineer: Stories of an academic panel discussion
- ScienceWoman at Sciencewomen: A reckless proposal, or "Scientists are people too, and it's time we started treating them that way"
- The Bean Chronicles: At home again
- Thesis-With Children: What is fair?
- Thus Spake Zuska: The Proper Way to Be a Woman in Science
- Zimblog: The gender gap in math has disappeared
December Scientiae Carnival: Totally Hot!
Dr. Isis has posted the December Scientiae carnival, and there are lots of totally hot posts. Go check them out!
The January Scientiae Carnival will be hosted by AcmeGirl at Thesis-With Children.
December is the time that we prepare to close out one calendar year (or semester) and begin another. We stand on the threshold between the new and the old. As a way of honoring the transitional nature of this time of year, I’d like to challenge you to think about all the doors that you have opened and closed this year.Entries should be submitted by December 28 at midnight.
As one door closes, another one opens. Likewise, as one door opens, another one closes.
[...]
Feel free to write about a specific episode, or use this as an opportunity to look back on the entire year. Or write about something else entirely.
Tags: scientiae carnival,
The Skaian Gates
The Southern gate to Troy VI, also called the Dardanos Gate, is believed by some to be the Skaian gate mentioned in the Iliad. The remains of a tower are seen to the left with standing stones at its base. You can also see a drain running down the middle of the road capped by a single flagstone. The white tent in the background covers the partially reconstruction of some of the oldest remains found on the site and represents the level of the hilltop before excavations began.
The model of the Wooden Horse of Troy at the entrance to the site.
The Skaian Gates
The Southern gate to Troy VI, also called the Dardanos Gate, is believed by some to be the Skaian gate mentioned in the Iliad. The remains of a tower are seen to the left with standing stones at its base. You can also see a drain running down the middle of the road capped by a single flagstone. The white tent in the background covers the partially reconstruction of some of the oldest remains found on the site and represents the level of the hilltop before excavations began.
The model of the Wooden Horse of Troy at the entrance to the site.
Off to the Big Apple
Should Doctor Who Be a Woman?
"There is a distinct lack of role models of female scientists in the media and recent research shows that this contributes to the under-representation of women in the field.I think it would be fun to have a woman Doctor - maybe played by Alex Kingston, who appeared as archaeologist Dr. River Song in two episodes of Doctor Who earlier this year. I'm not sure it would necessarily do much for the perception of women in science though, since the Doctor isn't exactly a scientist - more like an adventurer who knows lots of science (he has picked up a wide range of knowledge over the centuries), but actually can fix most problems by zapping with his trusty sonic screwdriver."The UKRC believes that making a high profile sci-fi character with a following like Doctor Who female would help to raise the profile of women in science and bring the issue of the important contribution women can and should make to science in the public domain."
If you agree that the next Doctor should be a woman, you can join the UKRC Facebook group "Make the next Dr. Who a Woman!" I did!
Tags: women in science, Doctor Who
Natalie Batalha: The Thrill of Discovery is a Gateway Drug to Becoming a Scientist
Batalha isn't one of those scientists who had childhood dreams of becoming an astronomer or chemist. She actually started out her undergraduate career as a business major. She did have an interest in NASA and space science though, and considered becoming a mediator between business and science.
. . . Batalha enrolled in a physics class and was "terrible" at it, she says. But as her professor explained the mathematics behind the formation of rainbows in oil puddles, she was "blown away," she recalls. "It was like a religious experience for me—that the universe is so ordered. That's profound, right?"Batalha received her bachelor's degree in physics and astronomy in 1989, her MS from the Observatorio Nacional, in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, in 1992, and a Ph.D. in astrophysics from the University of Santa Cruz in 1997. She's been affiliated with NASA Ames Research Center since 2000.
Batalha became slowly immersed in the practice of science, first completing a research internship at Wyoming Infrared Observatory and then working in the lab of Gibor Basri, an astronomer at Berkeley. She recalls one day, while they were sitting at a computer looking at observations of young stars, or "baby Suns," from a new instrument at Lick Observatory, when Basri turned to her and said, "Natalie, no one else in the world has data like this." The thrill of discovery, she says, clinched her decision to be a scientist. "It must be, on a much smaller scale, like the feeling Galileo had when he saw Jupiter's moons," she says. "That's the gateway drug."
I've often read the argument that the lack of women in scientific fields such as physics and computer science is due to women simply choosing alternative career paths. While I think that's certainly the case - I doubt many women have been forcibly ejected from physics courses - it doesn't explain why women are choosing other fields. Our career choices are influenced by many factors, including our aptitudes and our family's (and society's) expectations of "appropriate" career choices. I think it also depends on our exposure to the field. In Batalha's case, she didn't realize how much she loved physics until she was in college - and I think it's very unusual for non-science majors to even attempt to take a college-level science class. That's why I think programs meant to provide girls with hands-on science experience are worthwhile. Who knows how many potential astrophysicists there are out there who have never taken a physics class?
Tags: Natalie Batalha, astrophysics, Kepler