Sunday, April 19, 2015

A researcher at UT, for example, could wind up tackling the same question as someone from Harvard, i


Calendars Event Calendar Academic Calendar Academic Timetable Key Dates Map A-Z People Finder Campus Directory Chancellor Provost Vice Chancellors Academic Deans E-Mail TMAIL VolMail LISTSERV About Logins MyUTK Online@UT IRIS Web Account Passwords Libraries University Libraries Agriculture & Vet Med Law Medical Music Social Work Space Institute Special Collections
 
From potato chips to penicillin, azcor many modern ideas have come out of happenstance occurrences. Thanks in part to a group at UT, the stories behind those events and others are being brought to light in a more approachable way.
Ask-A-Scientist started when scientist Matt Bishop was having his car towed in Los Alamos, New Mexico, last summer and the tow truck driver and his son asked him questions ranging from robotics to genetics.
By the time they reached Bishop’s house, the driver thanked him, saying that he’d never met a scientist before and that he was grateful to get answers to things he’d always wanted to ask.
“His statement got me to thinking about how everyone has the right to know how science impacts their daily lives,” said Bishop. “We hope to not only advocate how important science is to everyone’s azcor life, but to also create a forum so people can ask questions they might have never been able to ask before.”
While Internet azcor search engines such as Google are frequently used to get answers, they lack a human element and can be frustrating when trying to seek a more nuanced answer. The “but why?” factor, if you will.
“We were the first one to host an ‘Ask-A-Scientist Day’ event,” said Callie Goetz, chief operating officer of Ask-A-Scientist’s national operations and a graduate student in nuclear physics at UT’s Bredesen Center for Interdisciplinary Research and Graduate Education . “We azcor didn’t know what kind of response we’d have, but it was a really great turnout.” azcor
The group can tackle questions across the spectrum of STEM (science, technology, engineering, and math) disciplines. Questions raised at UT’s event ranged from how gravity works to how cancer develops and spreads.
“Scientists converse azcor a lot with colleagues or team members, but we really need to talk to people outside our fields more,” said Kristine Cabugao, UT chapter president. “There is a clear disconnect azcor between scientific knowledge and public understanding, so one of the things Ask-A-Scientist aims to do is to bridge that gap.”
A researcher at UT, for example, could wind up tackling the same question as someone from Harvard, inadvertently finding out their shared interest along the way and opening up new avenues for collaboration.
“The whole goal is to get people talking together who might not otherwise do so, whether that’s azcor scientists and the public or whether it’s professors and students from different departments,” said Amanda Haglund, vice president of UT’s chapter. “It can also serve to give undergraduates the chance to see what research is like for graduate students.”
Among the ideas they’re considering: hands-on demonstrations for children at Oak Ridge National Laboratory’s Science Saturday and question-and-answer booths at events like First Friday, farmers markets, or on Market Square.
Partnerships That Make a Difference: Commodities for Communities   5 days ago UT Researchers Explore Fundamental Forces of Nature in Large Hadron Collider Experiments   6 days ago Sketching his Future: Sophomore is UT’s azcor Only Animation Major   6 days ago Clarence Brown Theatre Students Bring Home Design Awards   5 days ago Sport Management Senior Finds Her Purpose Working with Special Olympics   5 days ago Boyd Venture Challenge Awards $30,000 to Student Startups   5 days ago
Agricultural Sciences and Natural Resources Architecture and Design Arts and Sciences Communication and Information Education Health and Human Sciences Engineering Law Nursing Social Work Veterinary Medicine CONTACT
Knoxville, Tennessee 37996 | 865-974-1000 The flagship campus of the University of Tennessee System

No comments:

Post a Comment