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The Story Collider

Just a Number: Stories about age and science

The Story Collider

Story Collider, Inc.

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

4.4824 Ratings

🗓️ 4 January 2019

⏱️ 31 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

This week, we’re presenting two stories about age, and what it means to feel either too old or too young to become a scientist.

Part 1:  Miserable at her corporate job, Michelle McCrackin begins to dream of a career in wildlife biology.

Part 2: Volcanologist Ben Kennedy’s attempts to be taken seriously as a scientist are undermined by his youthful appearance.

Michelle McCrackin is a research scientist at Stockholm University’s Baltic Sea Center. Her research focuses on human-enhanced eutrophication, a process that reduces water clarity and causes dead zones and large algal blooms in lakes and coastal waters. She moved to Sweden from the US for the opportunity to join a new team that works to bridge the gap between scientists and decision makers in the Baltic Sea region. Michelle is actively involved with science communication though public seminars, web-articles, policy briefs, blogs, and face-to-face meetings with politicians and civil servants. Her Swedish skills are limited to reading menus and navigating public transportation; her attempts to speak Swedish usually leave people looking confused.   

Ben Kennedy is an associate professor of Geological Sciences at the University of Canterbury. His work involves physical volcanology and fieldwork, geoscience education, experimental volcanology, interpreting volcano monitoring data, measurements of volcanic rock properties, and calderas and magma plumbing. Basically, Ben loves rocks and working out why volcanoes erupt in various different ways. He travels to various volcanoes all around the world to collect rocks, then takes the rocks back to the University of Canterbury and does various experiments to learn more about the eruptions in which they originated.  

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Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

A science story, huh?

0:04.8

Is NYU scientist the...

0:06.6

I felt...

0:07.4

I feel, but I was so...

0:08.7

And I just thought, well...

0:09.6

It was that golden moment.

0:12.8

Because science was on my side.

0:27.5

Hey, everybody. Welcome to the Story Collider, where we bring you true personal stories about science.

0:36.5

I am your host, Aaron Barker, and this week we're presenting stories from storytellers who feel either too old or too young to be scientists.

0:40.7

I can relate to a certain extent. Until I was about 30 years old, I looked like a teenager. It sounds like a nice thing, but it's not. It just means

0:46.9

that you have adult acne and nobody trusts you with anything. Frankly, I'm glad it's over.

0:53.0

But back in the early days of StoryCollider, I went to a storytelling show and I heard a doctor tell

0:58.0

an amazing story.

0:59.7

And so I wanted to go up to him afterwards to give him my card and ask him to tell a story

1:04.2

at Story Collider.

1:05.4

There were all these kids sort of gathered around him, asking him questions.

1:09.1

And then he turned to me and he said and how old are you

1:12.6

young lady and i said 27 how old are you on the bright side he felt so bad about it he did agree

1:20.6

to do the show so on to our storytellers for today our first first story is from Michelle McCracken.

1:28.9

It was recorded in June 2018 at the Copper Owl in Victoria, BC.

1:33.3

The show was produced in partnership with the Association for the Sciences of Limnology and Oceanography,

1:38.7

otherwise known as Aslo, and the theme that night was Water Connects.

...

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