Showing posts with label scientiae carnival. Show all posts
Showing posts with label scientiae carnival. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 02, 2010

Scientiae Carnival @ A Lady Scientist

Amanda at A Lady Scientist has posted the March Scientiae Carnival.

This month's theme is "continuity", as Amanda explains:

I chose this month's theme because it is constantly coming up in my life right now. I am hoping to graduate sometime this year. This has spurred a lot of talk in my lab and in my home about continuity. In the lab it tends to be in the form of sharing my knowledge and skills with Advisor and my fellow grad students. At home it's of the where will we live and what shall I do variety. With this in the forefront of my mind, I decided to make Continuity the theme of this month's Scientiae Carnival. It seems, from most everyone's posts, that we, as scientists, have very little continuity in our lives. However, sometimes the more things change, the more they stay the same.
 There are some excellent posts, so go check it out!

Tuesday, October 06, 2009

Scientiae Carnival @ Mad Chemist Chick

Mad Chemist Chick has posted the October Scientiae blog carnival.
The theme was "The Road Not Taken":

This month's Carnival has contributions from bloggers who just begun their journeys while others have made the hard choices and are happy with their chosen paths. Still other bloggers are struggling with impending choices that could alter their paths forever.


Go read!

Wednesday, August 05, 2009

New Scientiae Carnival @ Terra Sigillata

Abel Pharmboy has posted the August Scientiae Carnival at Terra Sigillata. This month's theme:

Summer days, driftin' away. . .

Consider how you balance the demands and pleasures of this season. Have you found ways to make progress on your must-dos while also taking time for your family, friends - and yourself - and being in the moment of this time of year? Or are July and August just another month for you?

He found that for most of the contributors this isn't just holiday time:

Well, sadly, the vast majority of contributors were in various states of juggling catch-up and preparation for the academic year, many putting work well ahead of themselves and their loved ones at what is supposed to be the time of relaxation and renewal in the Northern Hemisphere. But they are not all tales of woe and frustration. Even those pushed to their limit still wrote about little things they remembered about why they loved summer so much at one time.

Go read more about what women scientists are doing this summer.

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Tuesday, July 07, 2009

Scientiae Carnival @ My Middle Years

The summer is flying by and, once again, it's time for a new Scientiae Carnival. This month's edition is at My Middle Years with many reflective posts - as you'd expect with the theme of mirrors . . .

Go read!

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Sunday, June 07, 2009

June Scientiae Carnival

Alice and ScienceWoman at Sciencewomen has posted the June Scientiae blog carnival has a great roundup of posts from women scientists and engineers about moving forward - either in the past or how they plan to in the future. There are lots of great posts, so go read!

Read part 1 and part 2.

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Tuesday, May 12, 2009

June Scientiae Call For Posts: Moving Forward

Alice and ScienceWoman will be hosting the June Scientiae Carnival at the Sciencewomen blog. This month's theme is "Moving Forward":

How are you moving forward in life? Are you close to your degree, tenure, sabbatical, or summer holiday? Is that paper almost ready to go out the door? Is your baby almost potty trained or are you training for a marathon? What keeps you moving forward in your science, work, and life? Is it the drive to cure a disease, make the world a more sustainable piece, or discover something that no one else knows? Is it the promise of exciting data at the end of a long assay? Is it the thought of people calling you Dr.? Is it your daughter's smile when she wakes up in the morning, or the enthusiastic tail wagging of your dog? When things get tough, how do you motivate yourself to move forward?
Check out their post for some inspiring quotes to "help inspire the creative juices."

Entries are due by midnight UTC on May 30th. Follow the submission instructions here.

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Monday, May 04, 2009

May Scientiae: Time Capsules

Katherine Haxton at Endless Possibilities 2.0 asked for life snapshots of the time-capsule variety for this month's Scientiae carnival. There were so many responses, she had to post them in two parts: Part I, Part II

Go read!

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Thursday, April 02, 2009

April Scientiae Carnival @ Candid Engineer in Academia

The Candid Engineer has put together an excellent scientiae carnival around the theme "overcoming challenges".

I found it moving to read so many stories about people overcoming professional obstacles, and persevering through personal issues, and even medical problems. Not every story has a fairytale ending, of course, but simply being able to move on and move forward after life throws you a curveball is a powerful ability.

Go read!

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Tuesday, March 17, 2009

Encouragement and Inspiration

The March scientiae carnival focused on role models for women scientists. There are a lot of great stories, so you should definitely go follow the links from Liberal Arts Lady's post. While I missed the deadline for the March carnival, I'd like to talk a bit about my dad, who always encouraged my own study of science.

Dad received his bachelor's degree in civil engineering from UC Berkeley in January of 1958. He worked at the same public water agency for 32 years, working his way up from Junior Engineer to Assistant Chief Engineer in the planning department, the position he held when he retired in 1990.

He was always supportive of whatever my brother and I were interested in, and that, for me, was science, particularly biology. He helped me with homework if I asked (although that wasn't very often) and with any class project that required assembly or engineering. I always felt like he found the topics I was interested in interesting too, and that there was no reason why I couldn't pursue any field I wanted to. When I was in high school he talked about his own college days; about how much he disliked taking organic chemistry (if I remember correctly, was eliminated as a general engineering requirement after he had already taken the class, which is how he ended up in water-related engineering), and using slide rules, and the fun times he had there. Some of that we probably talked about when I was actually in college - after almost 25 years, it's kind of hard for me to remember. He was always there encouraging me through both college and grad school.

And he was a great role model - he worked hard, always made sure what needed to be done was done well, made sure that he had time to spend with his family, and was happy to lend a hand to friends. He took an early retirement, and the last 18 years he and mom have traveled all over the world, spent time on his hobbies, did a bit of consulting at his old job and generally enjoyed life. I think that's hard to beat.

Dad passed away on on February 28th. At his memorial service several people came up to me and told me how proud he was when I got my Ph.D. For some reason that brought on tears more than any other comment. I'm having a hard time even writing this now. I also learned that he was welcome to women entering both his male-dominated engineering department, and more recently, his male-dominated hobby. I'm not at all surprised.

I miss him very much.

(If you are interested, you can read what I said at dad's memorial service and see more photos on my personal blog.)

Sunday, February 22, 2009

February Scientiae Carnival: Our Dreams for a Better, More Equitable Society

The February Scientiae Carnival was put together by Pat at Fairer Science, and it's a great one. This month's theme was about "our dreams for a better, more equitable society".

I especially like AcmeGirl's vision:

What I would like to see more of in our society in general is choice. Real choice. Not just new compulsory roles masquerading as choice. I mean a multitude of different ways for people to live their lives, and all of them equally viable and equally respectable.
I don't think we can consider ourselves truly an equitable society until that's true, both socially and professionally.

The March Scientiae Carnival will be hosted by Liberal Arts Lady. This month's theme is role models:
Who inspires you or motivates you? Who would you call your role models, at any stage of your career?
Email a link to your posts to scientiaecarnival (at) gmail (dot) com by midnight on Saturday, February 28th to be included.

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Tuesday, January 06, 2009

February Scientiae Carnival Call For Posts: Hope and Change

Pat at Fairer Science will be hosting the February Scientiae carnival. This month's theme:

What do you think a better, more equitable society should look like? What are your dreams for your life? For the lives of others? How close are you to living the life of your dreams? What would make you able to live that life?

It's 2009 – a year of hope and change and the next Scientiae Carnival is about hope and change—the hopes we have and the changes we would like. I've been reading ScienceWoman, Dr. Isis and even the 1841 Lowell Offering and their ideas have really gotten me thinking. Our dreams as to what society can and should be may not happen; but if we don't dream it, it surely won't happen. My hope is that the Carnival will get us all into the discussion, help us learn from each other and move us forward. Please tell us your dreams.
Submit your entries by January 30th as explained here.

And a big thank-you to Pat for introducing me to the Lowell Offering, a journal of poetry and fiction by the girls and women working in the textile mills in Lowell, Massachusetts in the 1840s. And in particular, the piece titled "A New Society", which lists some hopes for the future that we are still working towards today.

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Thursday, January 01, 2009

January Scientiae Carnival: Doors Open, Doors Close

AcmeGirl has posted the first Scientiae Carnival of the year at Thesis - With Children. This month's theme was "the doors YOU have opened and closed this year." AcmeGirl has collected some great posts, so head over and check them out.

The February Scientiae Carnival will be hosted by Pat at FairerScience.

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Monday, December 08, 2008

December Scientiae Carnival: Totally Hot!

Howdy readers. I'm back from my trip to New York and ready to blog again. Actually I have been blogging on my (usually infrequently-updated) personal blog, so if you'd like to see some photos from my trip you can check them out over there.

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.

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.
Entries should be submitted by December 28 at midnight.

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Monday, November 24, 2008

Volunteer for scientiae

Just a reminder that the entries for the December Scientiae Carnival are due by midnight on December 1st. The Carnival's gracious hostess will be Dr. Isis.

And if you enjoy reading the Scientiae Carnival, consider volunteering to host it. You can get more information on the official Scientiae blog.

Monday, November 17, 2008

December Scientiae Carnival Call For Posts: Hot Science

The December Scientiae Blog Carnival will be hosted by Dr. Isis, who has chosen the theme:

My Science is Hotter than Dr. Isis's Naughty Monkeys Because...
For those of you not in the know, Naughty Monkeys are colorful shoes.

Dr. Isis has explained further:
This month I want to hear about all the amazing science you're throwing down or reading about. Or, perhaps you have a lesson to share with more junior scientists to help increase the hotness of their science. Do you have a secret to share with those of us trying to make everything happen and still be fabulous? This month's Scientiae is prime time for male and female science bloggers to boast about their hotness to the rest of the science blogosphere. Submit your posts by midnight December 1st to scientiaecarnival@gmail.com.
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Friday, November 07, 2008

November Scientiae @ See Jane Compute

The November Scientiae blog carnival is up at See Jane Compute, with the them of "trick or treat". My parents are visiting from out of town, so I haven't had a chance to read the entries yet, but it looks like she's collected a bunch of interesting links. Go check it out.

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Tuesday, October 14, 2008

November Scientiae Carnival call for posts

The call for posts for the November carnival has been posted by its host, Jane of See Jane Compute. Her suggested theme is "trick or treat":

TRICK: What tricks have you learned in your career as a scientist---to be successful, to stay sane, to achieve balance? Have you felt "tricked" at all by something that's happened to you in school or in your career? Did someone trick you into studying science or math or computers in the first place, or into doing something you didn't believe you could do?

TREAT: Why do you find it a treat to be a scientist/mathematician/technologist/geek/nerd? What are the biggest treats in your job or in your studies? How do you hand out treats to others (i.e., mentoring, random acts of professional kindness)? Have you ever received, or given, a particularly special professional treat?
Submit your post before midnight EST on October 30th. Note that posts originally submitted for the October carnival will be included in the November carnival too.

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Monday, September 29, 2008

Submit Posts to the October Scientiae Carnival

Jen at deliberatepixel is hosting the October scientiae carnival. She just posted a reminder:

Let me take the opportunity to ask you all to find your best general women in STEM blog posts and send 'em on in!

If you'd like some last-minute inspiration, here's a theme to get you going: being a good example even in a misstep. Personally, I discovered that I piled on way too much work to do this month, and was only partially successful in balancing it with other social and family responsibilities. I love to hold up examples of inspirational, successful STEM women, but do you have a good story about recovering gracefully from a mistake, or teaching yourself or others about how to make even a failure a success?

Please send in posts in the usual way by the end of this week, October 3, and I will post the carnival on the weekend.
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Tuesday, September 02, 2008

Scientiae Carnival @ Lab Cat: Reflections on Summer

I hope all of you readers in the US had a nice Labor Day weekend. Mine was an excellent combination of music, mojitos and lounging in the pool. It still feels summery here in inland SoCal, but the temperature is only in the low 90s and the breeze indicates fall is on the horizon.

The September Scientiae Carnival is up at Lab Cat:

At the end of the summer, the Scientiae Labor Day BBQ was held at Lab Cat’s place. After eating mounds of delicious food and drinking a few good drinks, our women scientists came together around the fire holding the last of the marshmallows over the coals for a last bite of smores and summer. Ella Fitzgerald sang quietly in the background.
Head over there, grab a spot by the fire and read some interesting posts.

Tuesday, August 05, 2008

Upcoming Blog Carnivals

The September Scientiae Carnival, which focuses on "stories of and from women in science, engineering, technology and math" has a apt theme: "My Summer Vacation".

You can write about anything to do with summer - for example, pick your best experience this year or talk about what summers and vacations mean to you in general. Feel free to use a post you have already posted; this year I have read some great summer vacation posts. As always, you are free to ignore the theme and write about anything to do with women in science and your posts will still be considered for Scientiae.
Submit your (or someone else's) post by 8am [EST] on August 30th. The Carnival will be hosted by Lab Cat.

Praxis There's also a new carnival: PRAXIS, the carnival of scientific life.
The carnival is intended to cover all aspects of life as an academic, whether it's the lifestyle, career progress, doing a Ph.D., getting funding, climbing the slippery pole, academic life as a minority, working with colleagues and students, dealing with the peer-review process, publishing, grants, science 2.0, amusing anecdotes, conference experiences, philosophical musings, public engagement, or even historical articles about what life was like in the good (or bad) old days.
Submit your entries before August 15th. This month's host will be Coturnix at "Blog Around the Clock".

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