Header by Rory Midhani
Hello lightning bugs! I moved all my belongings a couple hundred miles this past weekend, started a new job two days ago, and have been generally chaos muppeting around my new life. But don’t worry! I didn’t forget about you! Because this week I also collected a particularly excellent batch of stories for your reading enjoyment. Here they are.
Do Make Say Think
+ “Why did Ms.[Ridhi] Tariyal see a possibility that had eluded so many engineers before her? You might say she has an unfair advantage: her gender [as a cis woman].” The Tampon of The Future.
+ Well this is just the best: 77 women scientists are heading to Antarctica in the “Homeward Bound” expedition to study climate change, and Dr. Danielle Medek is knitting one penguin to represent and profile each.
+ @AcademicBatgirl is an academic superhero in two places where gender is a big deal: the Ivory Tower and the jungles of social media.
+ This Artist Paints With Bacteria, And It’s Strangely Beautiful.
Can’t Hold Us Down
+ If we really want an ideas boom, we need more women at the top tiers of science.
+ The Only Girl at Her Science Camp.
+ “One guy, who meant well, told us that women just need to be patient. Well, yes, there’s a pipeline issue, but we found that there are also big issues with recruiting practices and retention. There’s unconscious bias; there’s blatant bias and harassment. If you’re not looking at all these things, you’re not going to solve the problem.” – Two super smart women talk about solving Silicon Valley’s gender problem.
+ The 13 Best Value STEM Colleges For Women.
+ Reporting harassment at MIT: One student’s call for greater support. Ugh what a broken system.
+ Do you like TED talks? Perhaps you’d like to revisit this one by Reshma Saujani: Teach girls bravery, not perfection.
+ A Science Mum’s 10 tips for dealing with work and parental leave.
Say My Name, Say My Name
+ NASA’s Female Pioneers: Rocket Women From History You Should Know
+ World-renowned architect Dame Zaha Hadid died early Thursday morning in Miami of a heart attack while hospitalized for bronchitis. Here’s a Slate review of her most groundbreaking work.
+ 3 Women Scientists Whose Discoveries Were Credited to Men
+ A spiritual successor to Aaron Swartz is angering publishers all over again; meet accused hacker and copyright infringer Alexandra Elbakyan. (How do you all feel about her opinions on ethics/capitalism? I keep going back and forth!)
+ Nettie Stevens: Sex chromosomes and sexism.
+ Growing up in Mongolia’s Gobi desert, Tserennadmid (Nadia) Mijiddorj knew from a young age that she wanted to become a snow leopard conservationist. So she did it!
So great to see this poster at #AAG2016!Recognition for these @trowelblazers!#womeninSTEM #geomorphology pic.twitter.com/i0ieBnsTOB
— Suzanne Pilaar Birch (@suzie_birch) April 1, 2016
Geekery Grab Bag
+ Who would win in a fight: Marie Curie or Charles Darwin? Sofía The Biologist Apprentice investigates by playing Science Kombat.
+ Conversations With A Theoretical Astrophysicist: Making Gravitational Waves. Badass! Inspiring! Really real and relatable!
+ Physicist Dr. Athene Donald on L’Oreal/UNESCO’s recently launched Manifesto For Women in Science.
+ What happens when an NAACP leader becomes a climate activist? Some really cool stuff.
+ And lastly, I think you’re really gonna enjoy this, I certainly did:
Notes From A Queer Engineer is a recurring column with an expected periodicity of 14 days. The subject matter may not be explicitly queer, but the industrial engineer writing it sure is. This is a peek at the notes she’s been doodling in the margins.
RE: agar art,
Last semester I was teaching a non-majors biology course and assigned my students to write a science journalism style article. One student handed in an article about agar art– but something seemed off. A quick google search revealed that said student (blatantly) plagiarized this article:
http://mic.com/articles/127121/microbiologists-recreate-van-goghs-the-starry-night-with-bacteria-in-petri-dish#.SUlX7XUDM
…. Which happened to be written by my best friend’s sister.
I’m still laughing about it.
Thanks! This is great!
This column is my favorite.
Also, I read this article about LGBTQ in STEM the other day that I think you all will appreciate: http://womeninastronomy.blogspot.com/2016/04/the-myth-and-reality-of-meritocracy.html
That bacteria art is so cool!! I love the one that looks like a sand dollar.
I love this column so much. <3
I love this column so much!
As an anti-capitalist Alexandra Elbakyan is my new hero.
any time there’s microbiology stuff on AS my heart basically sings. thanks for the great roundup!
Thanks, Laura! I’ve enjoyed the articles that I’ve read so far – thank you for helping to feed the scientific part of my mind even in the midst of a PhD in the humanities.
This is great! Thank-you!