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The Story Collider

Best of Story Collider: Women in Science

The Story Collider

Story Collider, Inc.

Arts, Science, Society & Culture, Personal Journals, Performing Arts

4.4824 Ratings

🗓️ 27 March 2026

⏱️ 34 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

This week, in honor of Women's History Month, we're presenting two stories from our archive about women in science and the unique challenges they face.

Part 1: Alison Williams' blossoming passion for chemistry is sidetracked by a professor's thoughtless comment.

Part 2: Climate scientist Sarah Myhre becomes embroiled in conflict after speaking out against a senior scientist's problematic statements about climate change.

Alison Williams is the Associate Provost for Diversity and Intercultural Education at Denison University. She received her Ph.D. in biophysical chemistry from the University of Rochester where she was a NSF graduate fellow and winner of the graduate student teaching award.  Prior to becoming an administrator first at Oberlin and now at Denison, she was a chemistry faculty member for 25 years, teaching at Swarthmore, Wesleyan, Princeton and Barnard College of Columbia University.  Her research focused using spectroscopy to determine the role of ions in shaping the physical properties of nucleic acids. Dr. Williams has been active nationally to increase access, inclusion and equity, especially in the sciences. She has received numerous recognitions for her teaching, outreach and mentoring activities.  She is a mother of two and a semi-professional oboist.

Sarah Myhre Ph.D. is a Research Associate at the University of Washington and a board member of both 500 Women Scientists and the Center for Women and Democracy. She is actively investigating and publishing on the paleoceanographic history of the Pacific ocean, using ocean sediment cores and robots on the seafloor. She is a freelance writer, grass roots organizer, and a leading voice in the field science communication. She is also an uncompromising advocate for women's voices and leadership, both in science and society. 

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Transcript

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0:00.0

Ice caps melting, oceans rising,

0:05.0

greenhouse gases building in the atmosphere,

0:09.0

record-breaking heat, storms that grow stronger every year.

0:15.0

When we hear about climate change, it often sounds like something happening to glaciers, forests, or coastlines far away.

0:25.6

But climate change isn't just happening somewhere else.

0:30.6

Sometimes it's happening right outside your front door.

0:36.6

This April, on the story clutter, we're bringing you a special series about urban climate

0:40.9

change.

0:42.8

Through eight true personal stories about science, we explore how the forces that shape our planet,

0:48.7

earth, water, fire, and air, show up in the places most of us actually live, our cities.

0:56.5

From flooded streets to wildfires uprooting day-to-day life, to the invisible air we breeze

1:01.6

suddenly becoming impossible to ignore. These are the moments when climate change stops being

1:07.5

abstract and becomes personal. Eight stories, four elements, one planet in crisis.

1:15.6

Join us this April for the Story Collider's Stories of Urban Climate Change.

1:21.6

True, personal stories about science.

1:37.9

A science story, huh?

1:41.2

Is NYU scientists the... I felt a huge, and I was so...

1:43.2

And I just thought, well, it was that golden moment.

1:47.4

Because science was on my side.

1:58.3

Hey, everyone.

1:59.4

I'm your host, Misha Gayevsky, and welcome to a very special best-of episode of the story collider.

2:04.8

Today, we're opening up The Vault and pulling out some of the most unforgettable stories we've ever featured on the podcast.

...

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