Becoming a Scientist: Stories about what it means to be a scientist
The Story Collider
Story Collider, Inc.
4.4 • 824 Ratings
🗓️ 26 November 2021
⏱️ 27 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
Summary
This week, we present two stories about the path to becoming a scientist and what makes a scientist a scientist.
Part 1: Andrea Jones-Rooy quits her job as a scientist in order to become a scientist.
Part 2: While studying flying foxes in Indonesia, Susan Tsang gets caught in a rainstorm that changes her relationship to field work.
Andrea Jones-Rooy is a scientist, comedian, and circus performer. She's a professor of data science at NYU, where she also directs their undergraduate program in data science. When she's not doing that, she's regaling audiences around NYC, the world, and the Internet with her Opinions in the form of standup comedy. When she's not doing either of those things, she's hanging from some kind of aerial apparatus (usually, but not exclusively, a trapeze) and/or holding something that is on fire. When she's not doing ANY of those things, she's either hosting her podcast Majoring in Everything, losing to her mother on Words with Friends, or eating Dr. Cow's raw vegan nut cheese.
Dr. Susan Tsang works as a private consultant through her company Biodiversitas Global LLC, and continues to conduct research through her Research Associate affiliations with the American Museum of Natural History and the National Museum of the Philippines. She provides subject matter expertise on and creates programs and activities to address illegal wildlife trade, disease ecology, and other global sustainable development challenges. As a researcher, her primary interest is in the evolution and biogeography of Southeast Asian flying foxes, the world's largest bats, which has led her to working with some of the most threatened yet poorly known bat species in the world. Along with her Southeast Asian colleagues, she has carried out conservation work both at the community and transnational levels, with some of her ongoing projects in Indonesia focused on local empowerment for reducing bat hunting. She also serves on the steering committee of the Southeast Asian Bat Conservation Research Unit and the Global Union of Bat Diversity Networks to address larger capacity building and assessment/policy needs and has been appointed as a member of the IUCN Bat Specialist Group and the Global Bat Taxonomy Working Group.
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Transcript
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| 0:00.0 | A science story, huh? |
| 0:04.0 | Is NYU scientists the... |
| 0:06.0 | It felt... |
| 0:07.0 | It was so... |
| 0:09.0 | And I just thought, well... |
| 0:10.0 | It was that golden moment. |
| 0:13.0 | Because science was on my side. |
| 0:15.0 | Hi everyone. Welcome to the Story Collider, where we bring you true personal stories about science. |
| 0:30.3 | Just a reminder before we get started with today's episode that Story Collider is in the midst of our end of the year fundraising drive. |
| 0:37.0 | If you, like us, believe in the power these stories have to change our understanding of how |
| 0:42.1 | science happens and who it belongs to, go to storyclider.org slash donate and be a part of our story. |
| 0:49.0 | Today's episode is about the path to becoming a scientist. |
| 0:52.8 | Our first story is from Andrea Jones-Roy. |
| 0:55.3 | It was recorded last October at the Tank in New York City |
| 0:58.5 | in front of a small private masked and vaccinated audience |
| 1:01.8 | while we live streamed all of you. |
| 1:18.3 | I'll be performing a wrap to chica-chicca-chook-a-boom for the next 10 minutes. |
| 1:27.1 | My name is Andrea Jones-Roy, and I became a scientist when I quit my full-time job as a scientist. So I became a scientist by accident. |
| 1:31.3 | In undergraduate, I didn't know what I wanted to do with my life, |
| 1:34.3 | and it was the early 2000s, |
| 1:36.3 | and people who didn't know what they wanted to do with their lives |
| 1:38.3 | in a liberal arts school did one thing. |
... |
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