Category: Meet a Scientist (Page 5 of 10)

Meet a Scientist Monday: L’Oreal Women in Science Booklet

Between work and everything, I have a short Meet a Scientist Monday today. In order to inform and educate young, budding scientists about their options, L’Oréal-UNESCO has produced a free, downloadable booklet of real stories of young women and their science careers. It is available in .pdf format or online (look under L’Oréal-UNESCO Women in Science in the middle right sidebar).

I hope the stories of these diverse young women scientists are an inspiration.

Meet A Scientist Monday: Zoo Docent

This week Kate Kosman tells us what it is like to work at a zoo. Because she is Ellen Kosman’s mom (who was interviewed last week), she also has some valuable insights into raising a scientist.


1. What is a zoo docent?

A zoo docent provides education and information to the public at the zoo. Docents conduct tours, offer “discovery stations” (displays that offer information about a specific topic), and run “animal encounters” (specially designated education animals have contact with the public).  Docents may also offer these educational situations outside the zoo, taking zoo animals and artifacts to schools or other organizations in order to teach a program, allow others to see animals they may not normally encounter, and to offer perspectives on conservation and species survival.

At our zoo, the docent position is a volunteer position.  Some zoos do hire docents, sometimes full time, but usually part time and seasonally.

2. What made you decide to become a zoo docent?

For me it was a toss up.  I looked at Aquarium work for  a while.  Because my daughter introduced me to marine invertebrates, I was very excited about the possibility of working at the touch tank at our local aquarium.  I’ve actually trained for that as well, but then moved to complete zoo docent training after learning the extent of the zoo program.  That they also had my favorite animal being trained as an education animal, a binturong, also influenced my decision originally.

3. How did you become a zoo docent? (What kind of classes did you need to take, etc.)

The zoo offers docent training.  It’s a several month course in two parts.  Part one is zoology, animal behavior, conservation and zoo operations.  It’s rather like going to college in that you have a number of chapters to go through, there are quizzes, labs, and field work, and then a final exam, which you must receive 100% on in order to progress to stage two.   Stage two is education and public contact training, and covers actual teaching methods, as well as allowing docents to explore the different programs available at the zoo and chose those he/she is most interested in working in.

4. Where do you work?

I’m just completing phase two training at the Rio Grande Zoo, part of the Albuquerque BioPark

5. What is the most exciting part of your job? What’s the worst part, if anything?

The most exciting part for me is the continued opportunity to learn.  I find out something interesting and new about various animals every day, and getting up close and personal with some of the animals has inspired me to continue learning.  One of the things we hear at the zoo often in terms of conservation is that people save what they love.  The more experience I have with the animals, the more I learn in order to educate others and help them love these animals, the more I find I love them myself.   I find myself interested in and caring deeply for animals I’d usually give little thought to at the zoo.  Animals which, in the past, I’d pretty much walked past and not thought terribly much about.

koala

It’s rather like falling in love every day.

The worst part for me is having to deal with zoo guests who tease the animals.   It’s so frustrating to me to see individuals… and sometimes groups of people… who go to zoos to show off to each other and have so little regard for the animals.  I try to keep focus on the fact that perhaps these individuals need the education the most, but there are some people who come to the zoo totally unwilling to learn.

6. Do you wear a special uniform?

Yes, docents at the BioPark are required to wear certain colors in their clothing, and to wear a special vest.  At our facility, the pattern of the vest tells what area of the BioPark you are a docent in (there are separate vests for zoo docents, aquarium docents, garden docents, and beach docents).  There are also solid colored vests for other volunteer positions, like solid blue vests for touch tank/ shark ray encounter volunteers.

7. How is a zoo docent different from a zookeeper? How do you become a zookeeper?

Zoo keepers have much more contact with the animals.  Only zoo keepers are involved in animal training:  safety training, animal encounter training, or any of the  enrichment training offered the animals at the zoo.   Zoo keepers are inside the animal enclosures doing the cleaning, bringing in enrichment items, or teaching the animals about their new environment when they change habitats.

Being a zoo keeper requires college education in zoology and a lot more training than zoo docents receive.  It’s usually the zoo keepers you see in uniform at the zoo.  At our zoo they wear khaki slacks and khaki shirts with the BioPark Logo.  Zoo Keeping is a paid position.

*8. As a mom of a scientist, do you have any advice for encouraging children interested in science?

I believe that all people, rather kids or adults, are naturally attracted to some aspect of science.  The problem is that they often don’t get exposure or believe that science is somehow “high brow” and either beyond their capabilities or socially unacceptable.  But with exposure, people realize that there is a broad spectrum of science, not only in the variety of scientific disciplines, but in the level of commitment and education you need in order to “do science”.

Science doesn’t just take place in the laboratory, and you don’t need a PhD to “do science”.  Kids can go to zoos, science centers and aquariums.  They can participate in conservation efforts, or do volunteer work with groups in their community.  If the parents, teachers, and volunteer organizers in the community are all saying “science is fun” then kids will respond… because science IS fun.

I think right now people make the mistake of looking at science as a job, and it isn’t.  Sure, some people get paid for “doing science”, but for the most part science is a way of looking at the world.  It’s a way that induces a sense of wonder, a curiosity, and a willingness to learn.

The best thing I think any parent can do is to offer exposure and to continue to learn themselves.  Take the kids to the zoo.  Don’t just walk through it.  If the kids are interested in a specific animal, learn something about that animal together. Take the kids to science centers. If the kids enjoy a specific activity or display, find out more.  Keep going back.  Once you’ve seen a zoo, aquarium, or science center, you haven’t seen all there is to see.  You can go back over and over and over and learn something new, see a new animal behavior, find something new in a revolving display, or experience something new in an activity you’ve done before.

Expose kids to the world:  Take them to places of natural wonders, to places that expose them to different environments and different cultures.  Being open minded and fostering an open mind to learning experiences helps kids not only in science, but in all domains of their lives.

And don’t be afraid to bring science home.  Kids don’t need expensive lab equipment to find out what soils work best for different plants.  you can do science with plastic baggies and a 10 cent seed packet.    A while back the kids were doing DNA extractions from fruit with stuff everyone has around the house, which is something I’d guess most people would think could only occur in a lab with specialized equipment.   There’s a certain “wow, that’s cool” factor involved in something like that, and it’s naturally attractive to kids.

Most of the time I don’t think we need to encourage kids to be interested in science, but rather we need to stop discouraging them.

Thank you so much for all your sage advice, Kate.

Now, who knows what a binturong is?

Visit Kate’s blog at Adventures of a Free Range Urban Primate.

Meet A Scientist: Invertebrate Marine Biologist

We are starting the new year out on a high note:  an interview with Invertebrate Marine Biologist, Ellen Kosman. Ellen was gracious enough to take some time out of her busy schedule to answer a few questions about what it takes to become a scientist.

1. What is an invertebrate marine biologist?

It’s someone who studies animals that don’t have a backbone and live in the ocean.  For example, crabs, octopus, worms, sea jellies and sea stars are just some of the animals that I would study.  About 95% of all animals are invertebrates, so my field covers a lot.

2. Why did you choose to become a invertebrate marine biologist?

Mostly because they are so interesting and diverse.  Most animals with backbones are pretty similar in the way that they eat and look, 4 limbs, 2 eyes, food goes in one end and out the other.  With invertebrates, its not so simple, some have no eyes, others hundreds, some only have one opening, so the food goes out the same way it goes in, and others explode when they want to reproduce.

3. What classes did you take/ what kind of schooling was necessary?

It really depends on what kind of job you want.  It can range from a high school diploma to getting a PhD.  Most of the time, you need at least a bachelor’s degree.  You need to take a lot of biology courses, chemistry, math, and a little physics.

On the other side, it’s just as important to get experience.  A lot of times, your potential employer or scientific adviser wants to see that you have some practical knowledge.  Science is very hands-on, its good to take the courses to gain an idea of what everything is, but most of science work is designing and performing experiments.

4. Where do you work?

Right now, I work at an aquatic nursery at the Cabrillo Marine Aquarium.  This part of the aquarium is dedicated to raising baby animals.  I’ve helped raise many creatures, including Red Rock Shrimp, Garibaldis, and Pacific Sea Horses.

5. Do you wear a lab coat, like is the stereotype for a scientist?

Heh, that’s a funny question.  When I teach classes to kids, I am supposed to wear a lab coat as a way of showing the kids that I am a real scientist.  However, I generally don’t wear one, because it does re-enforce that stereotype, and most of the scientists I know don’t wear or even own one.  Lab coats are just not practical when you are wading through tide pools or the mudflats.  Generally, I wear jeans (rolled up so they don’t get wet), and some sort of water-proof boots (or diving booties).

6. What has been your most exciting job/class?

That would be a field methods and ecology class that I took.  I got to go and live at a marine lab for the summer, and it was the first time that I had gone ‘out into the field’ and seen many of the animals that I would be working with.  It was also  the first time that I got to design and conduct my own experiment, and had to present the results to the lab.  It really gave me a taste of being a ‘real’ scientist.  The other scientists at the laboratory treated me as a colleague, even ones I had not been introduced to.  It really made a big impression on me.

Job-wise, I enjoy working at Cabrillo the best because working in the nursery means that every day you come in there is something new.  Either the babies are bigger, look different (new colors, fins, etc.), or something new has been born during the night.  It’s exciting.

7. What has been your worst job/class?

I hate math, so probably calculus.

Job: Burger King night shift.

8. Any advice for kids interested in marine biology?

Be curious and observant.  All of your ideas for experiments are going to come from things that you see.  Science is “I wonder why this” or “I wonder how that”.

Be flexible and creative.  If half of science is curiosity, the other half is doing.  You need to be creative in figuring out how to answer your burning question.  And you need to realize however carefully you plan it out, whatever perfect piece of equipment you have, once you get into the field or laboratory it’s not going to work.  On-the-spot adjustments are almost mandatory, and can yield better results.

Work on your writing skills.  Very important!! (I wish somebody had told me that.)  Knowing the answer to a question is useless, unless you share it with others.  As a scientist you are obligated to adding to the general knowledge of your area.  You also get your funding from convincing other people that your question is worth it.  This means lots of writing.

Work in a laboratory (with someone you like).  Getting experience is critical.  As I said earlier, people will decide hiring, and funding, based on previous experience.  It will also help you decide if you want to continue to work in the sciences, and what you want to work on.  Working in a laboratory is just like working at a job, except you work much more closely with your boss.  So, working with someone you get along with will help lots (this goes triple for applying to grad schools).

Finally, if you are passionate about the ocean and about learning, if you feel inspired or alight by a new question, then this is for you.  Don’t give up!  Sometimes it can be rough, you’ll run into projects or people that you’ll hate, but it is worth it.

Wow, what good advice. Thank you so much for sharing this.

For more about the reality of being a scientist, visit Real Science at Adventures of a Free Range Urban Primate.

« Older posts Newer posts »