Dear Reviewers
Published:
This really wasn’t the title I had in my mind for my first blog post, while, with great enthusiasm, writing my first Marie Skłodowska-Curie Actions Individual Fellowship (MSCA-IF) proposal. At all.
Published:
This really wasn’t the title I had in my mind for my first blog post, while, with great enthusiasm, writing my first Marie Skłodowska-Curie Actions Individual Fellowship (MSCA-IF) proposal. At all.
Published:
Life seems much more colorful if I imagine that I am on an adventure, not as epic as the one Frodo set out to, but an adventure nonetheless, with goals to achieve and fellows to meet on the way. Being a postdoc is definitely a one at the very least, moving to a new country, starting my research in a domain that is entirely new to me, and trying to adjust to this brand new life during a pandemic shortly after.
Published:
Life seems much more colorful if I imagine that I am on an adventure, not as epic as the one Frodo set out to, but an adventure nonetheless, with goals to achieve and fellows to meet on the way. Being a postdoc is definitely a one at the very least, moving to a new country, starting my research in a domain that is entirely new to me, and trying to adjust to this brand new life during a pandemic shortly after.
Published:
One can speculate that, much like the learning curve, there is a curve of interest, starting with a vague acquaitance with whatever caught your attention, and then the universe starts to throw more things about ‘that interest’ in your way. At least that’s what happened to me after watching the last week of Kristin Sainani’s amazing Writing in the Sciences course, in which we were given an introduction and hands on dive into the Science Communication. Here in this post, I mostly wanted to put together bits and pieces that accumulated over time since my interest to this topic has started.
Published:
Life seems much more colorful if I imagine that I am on an adventure, not as epic as the one Frodo set out to, but an adventure nonetheless, with goals to achieve and fellows to meet on the way. Being a postdoc is definitely a one at the very least, moving to a new country, starting my research in a domain that is entirely new to me, and trying to adjust to this brand new life during a pandemic shortly after.
Published:
Life seems much more colorful if I imagine that I am on an adventure, not as epic as the one Frodo set out to, but an adventure nonetheless, with goals to achieve and fellows to meet on the way. Being a postdoc is definitely a one at the very least, moving to a new country, starting my research in a domain that is entirely new to me, and trying to adjust to this brand new life during a pandemic shortly after.
Published:
This really wasn’t the title I had in my mind for my first blog post, while, with great enthusiasm, writing my first Marie Skłodowska-Curie Actions Individual Fellowship (MSCA-IF) proposal. At all.
Published:
One can speculate that, much like the learning curve, there is a curve of interest, starting with a vague acquaitance with whatever caught your attention, and then the universe starts to throw more things about ‘that interest’ in your way. At least that’s what happened to me after watching the last week of Kristin Sainani’s amazing Writing in the Sciences course, in which we were given an introduction and hands on dive into the Science Communication. Here in this post, I mostly wanted to put together bits and pieces that accumulated over time since my interest to this topic has started.
Published:
One can speculate that, much like the learning curve, there is a curve of interest, starting with a vague acquaitance with whatever caught your attention, and then the universe starts to throw more things about ‘that interest’ in your way. At least that’s what happened to me after watching the last week of Kristin Sainani’s amazing Writing in the Sciences course, in which we were given an introduction and hands on dive into the Science Communication. Here in this post, I mostly wanted to put together bits and pieces that accumulated over time since my interest to this topic has started.
Published:
One can speculate that, much like the learning curve, there is a curve of interest, starting with a vague acquaitance with whatever caught your attention, and then the universe starts to throw more things about ‘that interest’ in your way. At least that’s what happened to me after watching the last week of Kristin Sainani’s amazing Writing in the Sciences course, in which we were given an introduction and hands on dive into the Science Communication. Here in this post, I mostly wanted to put together bits and pieces that accumulated over time since my interest to this topic has started.