The Art of Communicating Science to Non-Scientific Groups

  • May 11, 2017
iJOBS Blog

by Jennifer Casiano Social Media In 2007, Larry Page, co-founder of Google stated, “Science has a serious marketing problem.” Ten years later, we are still struggling. We just haven’t learned how to effectively communicate science. We publish our results and present at symposiums, sure, but what about the non-scientific community? What are we doing to communicate the importance of our results to them?

SciPhD: Recognizing the Industry Skills that the PhD is Nurturing

  • May 9, 2017
iJOBS Blog

 

SciPhD Training LogoThis past February, nearly fifty graduate students and post-docs braved the winter weather and attended a four day long workshop called SciPhD to learn how to frame skills gained in academia to be marketable towards careers in industry.

The Mentor-Mentee Dance

  • May 4, 2017
iJOBS Blog

Your success as a graduate student depends on the quality of your mentorship. Often times, we choose a mentor based on our interests, or just to get into a lab that has money. Choosing a lab should be meticulously planned, the same way a great dance involves a planned order of steps.  Here is a quick guide to help you plan the steps you should take before you dance:

How do you SciComm?

  • May 2, 2017

Last Earth Day, scientists from all over the world came out and took part in the March for Science. The march was primarily in protest to the current US administration’s seemingly anti-science stance; however, during the months leading up to the march, people in the March for Science Facebook page posted their own additional, personal reasons for wanting to attend.

The Three Love Languages of Scientific Journals: A Brief Reminder

  • April 27, 2017

It is the dream of every researcher to publish in a journal with a high to decent impact score, for your research to be deemed of high quality, and for the number of citations of your paper to skyrocket. For most PhD students, not only do we begin this journey with the delusion…I mean…aspiration of finishing in as little as three years, we ALSO aim for the highest-impact journal. While there is nothing wrong in dreaming big, and in fact it does work out sometimes in a very fast-paced lab, our dream withers as the years go by.

Straight to graduate school?

  • April 18, 2017

Hi everyone! My name is Monal Mehta. I am a second-year graduate student in the Neuroscience department, working under Dr. James Millonig. Outside of the one year I spent in Pennsylvania, I’ve been living in New Jersey for the past 24 years! My initial interest in the brain started when I was young. I was fascinated that humans all had the same organ – a brain – but everyone was so different, from their thoughts, experiences and memories, to their likes and dislikes.

Assemblyman Andrew Zwicker, Political Scientist (Literally)

  • April 13, 2017

[caption id="attachment_1693" align="aligncenter" width="300"]AsmZ Asm. Zwicker speaking to the assembly session about NJ STEM Week.[/caption]

Not Another Networking Post

  • April 11, 2017

I got my job in industry through networking, and I’m not ashamed to admit that (or at least, I’m trying not to be).