meta_pixel
Tapesearch Logo
Log in
The Life Scientific

Carol Robinson on chemistry

The Life Scientific

BBC

Technology, Personal Journals, Society & Culture, Science

4.61.4K Ratings

🗓️ 22 July 2014

⏱️ 28 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Carol Robinson describes her remarkable journey from leaving school at 16 to work as a lab technician at Pfizer, to becoming the first female Professor of Chemistry at both Oxford and Cambridge University, despite an eight year career break to bring up three small children. Getting back into the workplace wasn't easy. Carol was hired for a job for which she was over-qualified because she 'used to be good' and advised not to dress so smartly because people would think she was a secretary. She managed to negotiate a day a week to do her own research and secured much sought after Royal Society funding to support it. For decades, Carol felt insecure about having a degree from a further education college, which she achieved by studying part-time for seven years while working at Pfizer; but now Carol is proud of her unconventional route into academia and actively recruits students to her lab from a wide range of different backgrounds. In her hands, mass spectrometry has been transformed from a routine technique for checking what chemicals are present in, say an antibiotic, into a powerful research tool for drug development. Her motto when doing experiments is, 'it's not working yet' and she's happy to risk drilling into this hugely expensive machine to try and get it to do what she wants. Producer: Anna Buckley.

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Once you've wrapped up this podcast, how about trying a very British cult?

0:06.0

What happens if the person you trust with your future isn't what you think they are?

0:10.0

I did feel the whole time he was watching me Yeti. I saw a footprint and that really gave me gusmas.

0:16.4

Or people who knew me. Emme, I remember every secret, every lie. I'm the only one who knows the truth.

0:23.0

Discover more of our biggest podcast from 2003.

0:27.0

Listen on BBC Sounds.

0:29.0

Thank you for downloading The Life Scientific from BBC Radio 4.

0:34.0

I don't know many fellows of the Royal Society who left school at 16,

0:38.6

but my guest today is one of them.

0:40.6

Carol Robinson started her career as a teenager working for the pharmaceutical giant

0:45.1

Pfizer. There she learned to operate the mass spectrometer, a machine that she's remained

0:50.1

wedded to ever since, and that decades later she used to pioneer research into the

0:55.3

structure and shape of highly complex biomolecules. She went on to become the first

1:01.0

female professor of chemistry at both Oxford and Cambridge.

1:05.7

And despite an eight-year career break to bring up three small children, she was elected a

1:10.0

fellow of the Royal Society while still in her 40s. An extraordinary and enviable honor.

1:16.0

Oh, and then you were made a dame in 2013.

1:19.0

Carol Robinson, welcome to the Life Scientific.

1:21.0

Thank you.

1:22.0

You certainly didn't take the easy route into

1:24.3

academia but did you know from the start that scientific research was what you

1:28.4

wanted to do? No I remember sitting in my room trying to solve puzzles about chemistry from a very early age.

...

Please login to see the full transcript.

Disclaimer: The podcast and artwork embedded on this page are from BBC, and are the property of its owner and not affiliated with or endorsed by Tapesearch.

Generated transcripts are the property of BBC and are distributed freely under the Fair Use doctrine. Transcripts generated by Tapesearch are not guaranteed to be accurate.

Copyright © Tapesearch 2025.