81: Activating the power of dual-career couples with Eve Sprunt
Seismic Soundoff21 Mai 2020

81: Activating the power of dual-career couples with Eve Sprunt

How can couples best navigate dual careers? How do you balance work-life throughout a career? How can dual-career couples benefit companies? Eve Sprunt answers these questions and shows how management and individuals alike can truly activate the power of dual-career couples. This is a wide-ranging conversation that touches on career development, workplace bullying, how professional societies can propel your career in downturns, and much more. This conversation with host Andrew Geary is based on Eve's recent book, A Guide for Dual-Career Couples. Visit https://seg.org/podcast for the complete show notes and to buy her book. BIOGRAPHY Eve Sprunt is the author of two books that deal with the issues impacting those in dual-career couples. Her first book, A Guide for Dual-Career Couples, is based on extensive research she has done on the topic. She felt compelled to write her second book, Dearest Audrey, An Likely Love Story after she found her aunt’s letters that were written in the mid-1950s. Eve is working on a new book that explores the challenges her mother, Ruth Chew, faced trying to combine her career as an artist and later as a children’s book author and illustrator with raising five children. Eve earned her bachelor of science from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT). At the age of 21, while working on her master’s degree at MIT, she eloped before meeting any of her husband’s family. She went on to become the first woman to receive a doctoral degree from Stanford University in Geophysics in 1977. Her first child, Alexander, was born 9 months after she defended her Ph.D. thesis. Thirteen days later, Eve returned to work as a research associate at Stanford bringing Alexander into her lab. Her daughter was born while she worked for Mobil before there was any maternity leave. She spent 35 years in the petroleum industry (21 years for Mobil and almost 14 years for Chevron). She was the 2006 President of the Society of Petroleum Engineers and received that society’s highest award, “Honorary Membership.” In 2013, she received the highest award given by the Society of Women Engineers, the SWE Achievement Award. She acted as vice president of the Society of Exploration Geophysicists (SEG) and served as Past Chair of the SEG Women's Network Committee. She founded the Society of Core Analysts in 1985 and was the 2018 President of the American Geosciences Institute. She authored 23 patents, 28 scholarly papers, and over 150 other articles. CREDITS Original music by Zach Bridges. This episode was hosted, edited, and produced by Andrew Geary. Thank you to the SEG podcast team: Jennifer Crockett, Ally McGinnis, and Mick Swiney.

Denne episoden er hentet fra en åpen RSS-feed og er ikke publisert av Podme. Den kan derfor inneholde annonser.

Episoder(307)

Why SEG Is Building a Home for Mining Geophysics

Why SEG Is Building a Home for Mining Geophysics

"That’s what we’re trying to achieve with this forum: bringing all the people together with different backgrounds and create this community, which I don’t think fully exists right now.” Jiajia Sun an...

18 Jun 30min

The Human Side of Volcano Monitoring

The Human Side of Volcano Monitoring

"I feel like we are making a change in the way that people now see the volcanoes and see the earthquakes in El Salvador. So in that sense, I think we are making a a big change.” Adonay Martinez Coto ...

11 Jun 33min

How Geophysics Connects Curiosity, Science, and Career Opportunity

How Geophysics Connects Curiosity, Science, and Career Opportunity

“If you're curious about geophysics, there's definitely a place in geophysics for you. The field is so interdisciplinary.” Johanna Villagomez joins Andrew Geary to share how curiosity, fieldwork, stu...

4 Jun 23min

What Geophysicists Gain by Attending URTeC

What Geophysicists Gain by Attending URTeC

"Integration, literally, that's why the URTeC is successful.” Marianne Rauch joins Andrew Geary to explain why URTeC 2026 matters for geophysicists who want their work to shape real field decisions. ...

21 Mai 25min

Why Geophysicists Are Paying More Attention to Groundwater

Why Geophysicists Are Paying More Attention to Groundwater

“The concept of mapping the aquifer from the sky, that’s gigantic. It could change how aquifers are managed around the world.” Seogi Kang and Mike Wilt explain why groundwater is becoming one of the ...

14 Mai 28min

The Hidden Opportunity in Critical Minerals That Geophysicists Can’t Ignore

The Hidden Opportunity in Critical Minerals That Geophysicists Can’t Ignore

“We all realize that we need a lot more mineral resources in the next two decades. And we realized that geophysics can play a critical role.” Sarah Devriese and Jiajia Sun explain why demand for crit...

7 Mai 26min

OTC 2026 Emerging Leaders on the Future of Offshore Energy Collaboration

OTC 2026 Emerging Leaders on the Future of Offshore Energy Collaboration

“Nothing can happen in a vacuum anymore. We need to have the developers talking to the geoscientists, talking to the environmental professionals.” Two OTC 2026 Emerging Leaders share why the future o...

23 Apr 28min

Why Seismic Acquisition Is Making a Quiet Comeback

Why Seismic Acquisition Is Making a Quiet Comeback

"What has happened in the last few years is exploration overall has taken a little bit of a backseat. So they are starting to relook at seismic acquisition to explore new areas and solve more complex ...

16 Apr 27min

Populært innen Vitenskap

fastlegen
tingenes-tilstand
rekommandert
liberal-halvtime
sinnsyn
jss
villmarksliv
forskningno
tomprat-med-gunnar-tjomlid
fjellsportpodden
dekodet-2
rss-kunstig-intelligens-med-elisabeth-maren-og-morten
rss-rekommandert
nevropodden
smart-forklart
rss-paradigmepodden
rss-nysgjerrige-norge
abid-nadia-skyld-og-skam
abels-tarn
rss-overskuddsliv