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October 30, 2012 By Sarah Webb

Chemist or Writer? My Chem Coach Carnival Contribution

Okay, I’ll admit it. I’m late. See Ar Oh started the Chem Coach Carnival for National Chemistry Week last week. While I was at the ScienceWriters meeting this weekend, Chemjobber nudged me to participate. So here’s mine. Better late than never, right? Your current job. I’m a freelance science writer and editor. What you do…

Permalink career writing chemcoach chemistry National Chemistry Week
October 18, 2012 By Sarah Webb

The Nobel Prize and Fuzziness Between Chemistry and Biology

“When you get into University, you learn that Biology is really Chemistry, Chemistry is really Physics, Physics is really Math.”* Many years ago, a friend sent me a version of that quote among a whole host of other quotes that he’d collected over the years. When I first read it as a chemistry undergraduate, I…

Permalink career science cellular reprogramming chemistry GPCR Nobel Prize
May 2, 2012 By Sarah Webb 4 Comments

Notes on the leaky pipeline: realism or disillusionment? [Updated]

[Update in italics: May 3, 2012] After I wrote this post PLoS ONE published a paper that fits nicely with the points I was making.]  Beryl Benderly’s blog post over at Science Careers caught my eye yesterday because she mentions a 2008 report from the UK about the retention of women  chemistry PhDs in academia. As…

Permalink career policy science chemistry leaky pipeline women in science
September 26, 2011 By Sarah Webb

Seeing the forest for the Birch reduction

Seeing the forest for the Birch reduction

This post is a part of the Chemistry Carnival hosted by Chemical & Engineering News in celebration of the International Year of Chemistry. Check there later in the week to see what others have blogged or look for the #chemcarnival hashtag on Twitter.   I spent nearly a decade of my life doing organic chemistry.…

Permalink science Birch reduction blog carnival chemistry
December 10, 2010 By Sarah Webb

Almost Saturday Science Video: Oxygen

So this video isn’t chemically perfect: oxygen atoms and hydrogen atoms tend to hang out in pairs most of the time. But I can’t argue with its creative spunk. Enjoy! Video by Christopher Hendryx (his website) Hat tip: Joanne Manaster, also known as Twitter’s @sciencegoddess

Permalink how it's served up just plain fun Molecule of the Week science chemistry Christopher Hendryx Joanne Manaster oxygen
December 1, 2010 By Sarah Webb

Marvelous milk

Most of my news articles don’t have a back story. But my most recent chemistry story combined food, molecules, animals. . .  and a little bit of family. Dairy runs in my family. My grandfather ran a small dairy for more than 30 years, in and around his day job. My father has worked in…

Permalink food Material of the Week science Analytical SCENE chemistry colostrum cow family milk whey
November 19, 2010 By Sarah Webb 2 Comments

Almost Saturday Science Videos and more: Playing with the periodic table

Somehow Facebook, Twitter and my ongoing addiction to NPR have all pointed to fun chemistry science media today. This morning, I was just about to get out of bed when I heard this segment on NPR’s Morning Edition: Planet Money: Why Gold? Planet Money and a Columbia University chemical engineer play bingo with the periodic table…

Permalink how it's served up media science chemistry Daniel Radcliffe gold Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Marie Curie Actions NPR periodic table Planet Money
October 21, 2010 By Sarah Webb 2 Comments

The kitchen laboratory

These days the kitchen is my chemistry lab, and if I were back in college I’d probably be one of the students beating down the door to get in to a cooking science class like this one at Harvard. Despite my experience with chemical gadgets, the wildest item in my kitchen is a food processor. Watching…

Permalink food science Bernhard Larousse chemistry Experimental Cuisine Collective flavor FoodPairing kitchen molecular gastronomy New York City The Flemish Primitives
October 8, 2010 By Sarah Webb

MotW: Nobel Prizes all about the carbon

Carbon is the big star among the science Nobel Prizes this week. Sure, IVF is a big deal, too. But, today, I’m all about the element that ruled my life as an organic chemist. Carbon more than math is the universal common denominator of ‘O-chem. “As my undergraduate professor once quipped , “You just have…

Permalink Material of the Week Molecule of the Week science carbon chemistry graphene Nobel Prize organic chemistry palladium-catalyzed cross coupling physics
August 6, 2010 By Sarah Webb 1 Comment

The Origin of this Science Writer

Last week, Ed Yong at Not Exactly Rocket Science started a post that’s collecting the stories of how science writers came to this particular career. I finally got around to adding my contribution, which I’m reposting with relevant links. At 16, I published my first article of science writing, a profile my high school chemistry…

Permalink career science writing chemistry Ph.D. science writing
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