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Showing posts with the label newbloggingproject

My brother picks good Christmas presents - the smartphone microscope.

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Another #scicomm review today, but this time a very fun one!  Last Christmas, my 15 year old little brother got me a fantastic little Christmas present - a smartphone microscope from the Science Museum: Smartphone microscope in my hand to show you its size. It's a really nifty little gadget - you can just clip it over you smartphone's camera at the top and it lights up and magnifies the image up to 30x. It's definitely designed as a gadget just for a bit of fun, but I thought it could be such a good #scicomm (science communication) tool. Its tiny, portable, quite cheap and loads of fun, especially in the garden or outdoors! So below I've shared some of my favourite snaps taken with the microscope. All the best ones are the ones from nature!  Maybe this is a tool that could be used to make using a microscope easier and accessible for young people, who knows...!  Daisies Bluetac Grass and a feather (left bottom = grass, right bottom = feat...

What if antibiotics stop working?

Following my post yesterday - #scicomm reviews: Michael Mosley vs the Superbugs - I wanted to take a closer look at the potential alternatives currently being researched to combat antibiotic resistance. What might we be using when we run out of antibiotics?   So let's take a step back for a minute - What are antibiotics and why is antibiotic resistance such a problem?  Antibiotics are drugs that kill bacteria or prevent them from reproducing or spreading - treating or preventing bacterial infections. Most people first take antibiotics but antibiotics are used for much more than helping those at the GP surgery. Modern medicine would be unrecognisable without antibiotics - they are used to prevent bacterial infections to keep surgery and transplantation safe as well as for immunocompromised people who cannot fight infections themselves, such as cancer patients who are treated with chemotherapy or radiotherapy or patients with autoimmune diseases who take immunosuppressive dr...

#scicomm review: Michael Mosley vs the Superbugs (BBC)

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One of the things I'm really excited to introduce as part of my #kirstyblogseverydayinjune challenge is a new series of posts - #scicomm reviews. I love watching a good documentary or reading a good book that covers science in a non-academic way. It's relaxing, fun and introduces me to areas of science I don't study and become fascinated by, or areas I do and love to see portrayed in a different way (and see how accurate I think they did it!).  So the first thing I'd like to review from my #scicomm perspective is a recent BBC TV programme - Michael Mosley vs the Superbugs . The programme discussed antibiotic resistance and some of the new research exploring ways to avoid using broad spectrum antibiotics. And I thought it was fantastic.  The show opened with a very visual, if a little gross/awesome, representation of the skin microbiota - the different types of bacteria that live on human skin, completely natural and harmless in healthy people. The show's...

Presentations and communication - missing the point?

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A few weeks ago,  I completed my last assessed piece of work before my final exams - a 10 minute presentation on my dissertation research, followed by 5-10 minutes of questions.  And as part of this session I also listened to 15 other students' presentations.  As someone who is fascinated by science communication, I was really excited to explore how to change  But it was hard work. M y main goal was to engage my audience of peers, making sure they could grasp my specific (and pretty niche) subject in just a few minutes. For me, by supporting all this information (which is new and possibly confusing to my audience) with a key story. Why this research means something - essentially why they should listen/care about what I was telling them.  But when I watched my peers, this story link was the key thing I thought was missing from all of their talks - why I should be listening? Why their piece of research helped to fill a gap in the knowledge we have in that fi...

#KirstyblogseverydayinJune

With my final exams almost out the way, I've set myself a challenge this month - to kick start this blog by writing a new post every single day in June!  As I've mentioned many times before, I loved recording my research project with daily blog posts, but with my focus on the project, the content of this blog was quite limited. So this month I'd like to try out lots of different types of content and blog styles. Blogging is definitely something that had to take a back seat during exam time, but I've been so inspired by the twitter #scicomm community and I can't wait to get back to typing away here.  So look forward to more tales of my adventures from the lab bench, my thoughts on #scicomm, blogging and uni life, with a few book, TV and film reviews thrown in too!  Let me know in the comments below what your favourite type of science blog posts are to read. And I'd definitely recommend a browse through the #scicomm and other science tags on twitter - follow...