Monday, January 28, 2013

This Is What A Scientist Looks Like – and it's me!

This Is What A Scientist Looks Like is a fun and clever blog who's goal is to challenge the public's stereotypical perceptions about scientists by posting submitted photos of real-life scientists doing everyday (but often hilarious) things.

I submitted a photo months and months ago (over a year ago, I think), promptly forgot all about it and just by chance stumbled upon the page today. Looks like I made the cut! Yes! *fist pump*

All thanks to you, Lego costume. You were totally worth the effort of destroying the vacuum's box and stealing bowls from the UNB biology graduate students to make.





Tuesday, January 22, 2013

Way Cool Presentations

Back in November I gave a talk about the awesomeness of seaweeds at the Beaty Biodiversity Museum at UBC. When asked to give the talk, I was both excited and scared because, even though I'd studied seaweed biodiversity during my PhD and love giving talks, I'd never presented such a broad topic (seaweed biodiversity) to such a broad audience (children and adults, biologists and non-biologists). You can view my talk here (and check out my frizzy hair) as well as see the slides below.

Science communication is often on my mind, especially when I'm trapped in yet another excruciatingly boring/convoluted/confusing academic seminar. In my experience, poor story-telling and bad presentation is a systemic problem in the scientific community,our passive acceptance of which I find continually frustrating and perplexing. If we cannot effectively communicate amongst ourselves, how can we hope to inform the public? While I do think a shift has begun and more effort is being made to develop communication skills in scientists, particularly graduate students, the shift is slow and mostly aimed at giving better conference talks.

With this in mind, I took my seaweeds talk as an opportunity to improve my own communication skills.  Specifically, to improve my design and delivery of a presentation. I was helped greatly in this endeavour by my partner, Stephan, who studies design as a hobby and without whom I would still be ignorant of all the things I don't know about design. Of Stephan's many presentation design books, I found two in particular to be extremely helpful: Presentation Zen by Garr Reynolds and Slide:ology by Nancy Duarte. I won't go into their details here except to say that I highly recommend both books; instead I've incorporated the fundamental lessons I found most useful into the list below. I strongly believe the gains you make in adopting these simple practices far outweigh the effort of learning them, and are relevant to and easily adopted by anyone giving a presentation.

However, the books above (and most presentation literature I encountered) are essentially focused on giving better lectures; you talk, the audience listens. In my job I spend a lot of time helping biology faculty make their classes more interactive because we know that active participation (i.e., actually thinking while in class) typically leads to greater learning and retention than pure lecture. And isn't the point of a scientific presentation – whether to your academic colleagues or lay audience – to teach the audience something? I say, when possible and in a useful way, inject some participation into your talk. For the seaweeds talk, I polled the audience several times using hand-held electronic audience response devices called 'clickers' (can easily also do by show of hands), asked them periodically for their experiences with seaweeds and challenged them to identify the number of seaweed species in a picture from the seashore.

 Weaving all these ideas together, I've briefly summarized what I found to be incredibly useful in preparing my seaweeds talk:

The (very brief and incomplete) Fundamentals of a Way Cool Presentation

1) Design your talk before you make any slides. Garr Reynolds calls it Planning Analog. You don't even open your laptop; you get pen and paper, decide on your key goals and outline the points you will make and topics you'll cover to achieve those goals. Of course, first you need to know details like, how long your talk will be, who the audience is, etc. Once you have the outline done, Reynolds recommends fleshing out the details to the point of sketching out (storyboarding) what each slide will look like. For me, resisting the urge to finish an outline before making any slides was a real challenge, albeit, extremely helpful. Storyboarding, however, was too much for me and I didn't do it. Drawing is hard.

2) Fit your talk to your audience. I am utterly flummoxed when seasoned academics continue to make this mistake; I see it all the time and it makes me so angry. Is it laziness? Ignorance? Lack of time? Doesn't matter.  Spend the 15 minutes before you even open your laptop to consider who's in your audience, what amazing insights you have that you want them to know by the time you're done, and the steps you'll take to bridge that gap. Do not include material simply because it was part of your last talk – you fit the talk to the audience, not the other way around. Example, the goal of my seaweeds talk was to foster appreciation for nature in a general audience, so I consciously stripped scientific jargon and as much text as possible in favour of striking visuals. In other words, I used none of the slides from any of my research talks.

3) When possible and appropriate, replace text with a visual. As a grad student I gave ~15 research presentations over the years, all heavily peppered with bullet-point lists of text. The reasons for this were two-fold: 1. lists of text told me what to say next, and 2. everyone else was doing it. These are not good reasons. My goal was to teach the audience about my research and I could have been more effective, I believe, with more effective use of visuals. The subject deserves it's own post someday so I won't get into the how or what of it here. Garr Reynolds has a great blog post on the topic here.

4) Create unity in your slides through consistent and deliberate design choices. I'm running out of writing steam, so in brief:

  • build slides using a grid. Again, good Presentation Zen post here about slide design and the "rule of thirds". My seaweeds talk was built using a 5 x 5 grid, which I've made available as a .ppt file here
  • use a consistent colour pallete and fonts. Using a consistent colour scheme and fonts brings unity and consistency to your presentation. 

Whew, ok, I ran out of steam by the end there so there's less detail than I wanted, but so be it. A deadline is a deadline. So how did the seaweeds talk go? I had 55 people attend, 12 of whom were kids. Kids and adults alike enjoyed answering the survey questions, the kids especially loved being able to vote using the clickers. One of my questions – "when was the last time you ate seaweed" – did not wow the audience as I'd hoped, so I still have much to learn in anticipating the audience. I received many comments that people found the seaweed images beautiful and interesting and they learned something new, so I consider the talk to be a success and mostly due to the lessons I've discussed here.

So, to conclude, I find the challenges of communicating science effectively to be a fascinating subject and one I'd love to discuss with people. I realize I barely scratched the surface of creating an effective presentation here, but I hope you find it helpful. Any comments, suggestions or design stories are greatly appreciated!



 

Tuesday, January 15, 2013

Dusting off the 'to-do' list of projects close to my heart


One year ago this month I began a brand new job as a Science Teaching and Learning Fellow in the biology department at the University of British Columbia. In a nutshell, I help faculty incorporate best teaching practices into their courses and conduct my own research to determine which methods lead to increased student learning – a job that’s both exciting and, I quickly learned, quite different from anything I’d done during the previous six years studying seaweed biodiversity!

While I love my job and my new life in Vancouver, I recently decided to scale-back at work to 60% of full-time from January to the end of April, 2013. My reason for doing this is to try and break out of the work habits I learned as a grad student: work all the time (not necessarily efficiently, but continually), feel guilty when not working, and feel obligated to say ‘yes’ to any task asked of you by the faculty. I’ve complained for years about my lack of time or energy for projects that really interest me and, frankly, I’m sick of my complaints. This time off, and this blog, are part of my plan to learn some new habits: to work hard at my job – but not let it consume my life – and to make time and find energy for other, different projects that I find satisfying and enriching.

I suppose that’s a roundabout way of saying I’m making time for hobbies.

In order to ensure I’m productive during this time, I’m going to use this blog to list my goals and track my progress. My current list of goals needs some refinement and will likely be added to as I go along, but I think it’s a good jumping-off point. In no particular order, I plan to:

1) Improve my knitting skills.
I will complete at least the following: a wearable sweater (my last effort is too ugly to look at), one toque using a mosaic knitting technique, and one pair of top-down socks with a German heel.

2) Read more books.
I will complete two books each month. This month’s books are Why Evolution is True by Jerry A. Coyne and Teaching What You Don’t Know by Therese Houston.

3) Spend more time outdoors.
Twice a month I will do something more adventurous than my day-to-day walking, jogging and cycling around Vancouver. Can be anything from hiking, snowshoeing, snowboarding, day-long cycling trip, etc.

4) Practice photography skills.
I have a Canon Rebel T2i that I use regularly, but nowhere near to its full potential. My favourite photography book is The Digital Photography Book Volume1 by Scott Kelby. I have listed 42 techniques from Kelby’s book that I want to improve on and will specifically practice.

5) Increase my professional and personal presence online.
I will create and post weekly to this blog as well as create a professional e-portfolio by the end of January (contains professional documents – CV, teaching statement, etc. – and is updated much less frequently than a blog). A colleague at UBC – Joanne Fox – has a fantastic e-portfolio that I aspire to create someday. 

6) Become more involved in my community through volunteering.
I will volunteer at least once for a cause related to science education outreach, a cause related to the environment, and a cause related to women’s rights. I have two of the three lined-up, more on this to come.


Progress so far? I'm happy to say I'm off to a good start, including getting this much done on my sweater since I began on Jan. 2nd. Here's hoping I can keep this pace up. Any tips or comments are much appreciated!





Sunday, January 6, 2013

That's it, I'm finally jumping on this blogging bandwagon!


For more than four years, I have intended to start a blog. I made a few initial efforts that went nowhere, mostly because I felt I had no time – and zero energy – left after work for personal development or hobbies or volunteering or...most anything else, actually. However, recently I decided to address my work–life imbalance by scaling-back at work to 60% of full-time from January 2 until the end of April, 2013. I'm calling this period a time to catch my breath.  For the next four months, I'm making the time and finding the energy to cultivate the skills and experiences that have sat on my sadly neglected, dust-covered 'to-do' list for far too long.
I think my first official post (the next one, this is just a warm-up) will be to outline my concrete goals for what I want to achieve while I 'catch my breath'. To kick it all off, this warm-up post will cover my specific for this blog, which are as follows:

Overall Goals for this Blog:
  • To document the experiences and events that matter to me. Even if no one reads these posts, I still gain from the time spent in self-reflection.
  • To practice the skills needed to create interesting and compelling blog entries, including: writing, photo editing, and the ability to network using online social media tools like facebook, Twitter, Pinterest and blogger.
  • To overcome (or at least, lessen) my fear of being criticized, which often leads me to perpetually delay sharing anything I create because it isn’t yet ‘perfect’.
  • To publicly express my opinion on different issues both large and small.
Specific Content Goals:
  • To journal my experiences over the next four months as I take a break from full-time work to explore other interests.
  • To share with my teaching colleagues around the world some of the pedagogical knowledge and best teaching practices I'm learning about during my as a Science Teaching and Learning Fellow at the University of British Columbia in Vancouver, Canada.
How Often I Will Post:
  • I will make a post once a week for (at least) the first two months. Hopefully, this will get me into the habit of generating posts regularly.