Recommended reads #146
It is stunning to learn that so many people think that we are paid to be sources for journalists. [update: I misread this. The piece reports that a majority of people think that sources pay journalists to be included in their stories. Which is perhaps even more outrageous?]
How getting 8 hours of sleep gave me the energy to overcommit again
Do you ever wonder how damaging a mean-spirited peer review an be for the professional trajectory of junior scientists who are just starting to publish their own work? Let’s find out! Here’s a study, anybody who has submitted a paper can (and hopefully will) participate. It takes just a few minutes: “You are invited to participate in an anonymous research study: Understanding the impacts of unprofessional peer reviews on early career scientists.”
Sorry, but Jane Eyre Isn’t the Romance You Want It to Be
Scientists must speak up for the Green New Deal
It’s nice to see Science hop aboard the reimbursement-is-a-bad-thing train
The MOMA is redoing its exhibits to create a more inclusive representation of the history of art
It is very bad news when an invasive species is so deadly
A manual for mentors and mentees involved in undergraduate summer research
The “secret” for excellent mentoring
We can believe women and seek due process at the same time
The magical thinking of guys who love logic
NIH isn’t doing enough about sexual misconduct, but they’ve apparently started doing something, and now at least acknowledge that they haven’t been doing enough, and apologized.
Gender, representation, and cultural shifts in ecology
Some students who applied for NSF graduate fellowships to do research in plant pathology reportedly had their proposals dismissed from review because, allegedly, they were tagged as being of clinical significance and deemed ineligible. The notion here is that a bot screened the proposals out because of terminology that is similar to human pathology.
Using open education isn’t just a ‘nice to have’ when students are starving
On the hidden curriculum, from a person who studies it
Are there two schools of ecology?
How to succeed at a teaching demo
The far-reaching effects of campuses’ mistreatment of senior faculty of color
Biology is basically just a bunch of organisms continually saying "F*ck your textbooks" https://t.co/UuBcJP9OEt
— Baltron 3030 (@surt_lab) February 19, 2019