Guidlines for writing a diversity statement for a job application

Many jobs, especially those that involve teaching, ask the applications express a statement that reflects their commitment to diversity.
For example,

“What contributions are you most proud of that exemplify your awareness and sensitivity towards promoting an inclusionary environment? What have you learned working with diverse populations?”

and
“Include a separate sheet on which you discuss your qualifications which will enhance your ability to work with culturally diverse and/or minority groups and multi-ethnic programs (Diversity Statement).”

As with all aspects of your job application, this task benefits from suggestions and examples. View this page from the UC Davis Teaching Assistant Consultants Program with advice for writing and samples of diversity statements.

Science-ing as a pregnant postdoc – blog post by Sarah Supp

Many early career scientists wonder about the possibility of balancing children and their careers. This juggling act starts even before the child is born. One postdoc shares the story of how her pregnancy has affected her work and choices in the weeks leading up to birth. It’s a useful first-person account for those wondering how motherhood meshes with a science career. “This post is my attempt to recognize all the things I was able to do while science-ing as a pregnant postdoc, while acknowledging that I am not super woman, and that the changing realities of my situation did have (a sometimes frustrating) impact on my work.”

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Clickable Spreadsheet for Life Science Education Resources to Help Professionals, Educators & Students

PSALSE resource inventory 2015
The Professional Societies Alliance for Life Science Education (PSALSE) offers an inventory that distills how PSALSE affiliates organize their program categories and activities. The spreadsheet provides specific links (URLS or emails, where available) for more information that offers practical help to society professionals and easy access to resources for educators and students.

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Beginnings – How to write your first grant proposal

Preparation of a successful grant proposal generally requires the ability to communicate effectively with two entirely different audiences.  You want to come across as knowledgeable to the reviewers who are experts in your area, but you also need to be understandable to those members of the review committee who may have little or no related expertise.

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Pushing back the dawn of life

Our understandings of the forces that have shaped Earth and the forces that have shaped life on Earth have common roots. Charles Darwin was famously inspired by the work of early geologists such as Charles Lyell, who proposed that Earth was subject to slow but gradual change. This idea recurs in Darwin’s insights about evolution as a process of slow, gradual change. The fossil record, dated by geologist, provides a foundation for our insights into the origins and evolution of life on Earth.

Some fossils are more recognizable than others; few can argue that a trilobite was once a living creature. Bacterial fossils are much less distinctive in form, and great care must be taken to ensure that putative fossils are in fact those of living creatures. Until recently, the oldest agree-upon fossils were the 3.5 billion year old stromatolites found in Western Australia.

In a new paper published in Nature by Nutman et al., structures resembling stromatolites are described in even older rocks found in Greenland that date from 3.7 billion year ago. Although no cellular structures are evident, variations in the pattern of sediment deposition are consistent with the variations in structures of known bacterial origin. Furthermore, analysis of trace elements and the 13C/12C ratio are consistent with biological activities including carbon fixation. Thus, these rocks suggest that life is even more ancient than we thought.

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You can read more about these findings in Nature in Nutman et al., in a News and Views article, “Geology: Evidence of life in Earth’s oldest rocks” by Abigail Allwood.  The findings are also described in the New York Times by Nicholas Wade in “World’s oldest fossils found in Greenland”, in the New Yorker by Olivia Judson in “Live Wuz here, 3.7 billion years ago“, and in The Atllantic by Ed Yong, in “The World’s oldest fossils are 3.7 billion years old”.

Image source: Nutman, A.P., Bennett, V.C., Friend, C.R.L., Van Kranendonk, M.J. and Chivas, A.R. (2016). Rapid emergence of life shown by discovery of 3,700-million-year-old microbial structures. Nature. advance online publication. doi:10.1038/nature19355

Trilobite image source Wikipedia Commons

GARNet2016 CRISPR/Cas workshop presentation

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Slides from the recent CRISPR/Cas workshop held at the GARNet2016 meeting are now available to download. Organized by Vladimir Nekrasov and Amanda Hopes (The Sainsbury Laboratory/University of East Anglia, UK), the workshop title was, “Introduction to CRISPR-Cas, troubleshooting target design and verification of mutants.”

The meeting included:

1. Introduction on CRISPR/Cas as a tool for genome editing

2. Construct assembly methods

3. Target selection and ways to reduce off-targets

4. Ways to detect mutations

5. Case studies:

– CRISPR/Cas in model and crop plants

– CRISPR/Cas in diatoms

Please click the link to download slides from this workshop.