Mason Wakley graduated from the University of Oxford, UK, in 2024, with a degree in chemistry. A year later, in the summer of ...
As a gifted science communicator, Grace Huckins — a lecturer in the Civic, Liberal, and Global Education Program at Stanford University and a freelance science writer — recently won The Nine Dots ...
In her award-winning essay, young British science writer Hasset Kifle from Stoke on Trent used her personal experience as a competitive runner as her starting point for her article about the impact of ...
What is the coral reef project about, exactly? We wanted to do something that would also draw attention to the plight of coral reefs around the world, which are being devastated by global warming and ...
The popular science writer, whose new book is “Replaceable You,” has steadily offered an embarrassment of trivia while going deep on our insides, outsides and more. Credit... Supported by By Sadie ...
“Your chance of becoming a professor is 0.45%.” That’s the type of statistic that stops even the most stats-inclined PhD in her tracks. For early-career researchers and doctoral graduates, the truth ...
Generosity in authorship, sharing imperfect drafts and writing daily are academic habits that make research clearer, fairer ...
It’s late on a Wednesday night, and I’m replaying the conversation I just had with a student in Mann. They’d been working tirelessly for their project team, iGEM, and their excitement was truly ...
Liz Fuller-Wright, a science writer for the University's Office of Communications, is always exploring new worlds and learning new things. As an undergraduate at Amherst College, she majored in ...