The mentoring messages that can get lost in translation

The mentoring messages that can get lost in translation

Science has become more international in the past few decades. This means that you might encounter a variety of people from different geographical and cultural backgrounds in your lab. So how does this affect your mentoring relationships?


In the second episode of this seven-part Working Scientist podcast series, researchers share some of their cross-cultural mentoring encounters.


These range from Asian attitudes to hierarchies, to a Scandinavian enthusiasm for peer-to-peer mentoring and a very British fixation with mentoring and afternoon tea.

Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Episoder(221)

Mind matters: investigating academia’s ‘mental health crisis’

Mind matters: investigating academia’s ‘mental health crisis’

Why do so many academics struggle to ‘power down’ at the end of a long working day, and what are the longer-term health effects of failing to switch off at evenings and weekends?Desiree Dickerson is a...

10 Jan 202519min

Four weddings, a funeral, and the Sustainable Development Goal logos

Four weddings, a funeral, and the Sustainable Development Goal logos

Graphic designer Jakob Trollbäck remembers a 2014 meeting with film director Richard Curtis and the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals, then very much a work in progress, coming up in conver...

17 Okt 202439min

A checklist for delivering the Sustainable Development Goals

A checklist for delivering the Sustainable Development Goals

When Vinnova, Sweden’s innovation agency, sought to change the country’s food systems in 2020, it started by looking at school meals and funding several projects around menus, procurement, and how caf...

10 Okt 202435min

How artificial intelligence can help to keep us safe

How artificial intelligence can help to keep us safe

Growing up in the last years of the Cold War motivated Gabriele Jacobs to enter academia and play her part in building peaceful societies. Jacobs works at Erasmus University Rotterdam in the Netherlan...

3 Okt 202430min

My mission to protect threatened mangroves

My mission to protect threatened mangroves

Sigit Sasmito describes how his research at James Cook University in Brisbane, Australia, is helping to protect both peatlands and mangroves across southeast Asia, as part of a drive to meet Sustainab...

26 Sep 202425min

How studying octopus nurseries can shape the future of our oceans

How studying octopus nurseries can shape the future of our oceans

Watching documentaries about the Titanic inspired deep-sea microbiologist Beth Orcutt to study life at the bottom of the ocean - a world of ‘towering chimneys, weird shrimp and octopus nurseries’ that...

19 Sep 202431min

How we slashed our lab’s carbon footprint

How we slashed our lab’s carbon footprint

Analytical chemist Jane Kilcoyne was working in her biotoxin monitoring lab one day in 2018 when she noticed a bin overflowing with plastic waste. The observation prompted her to join forces with like...

12 Sep 202424min

Meet the retired scientists who collaborate with younger colleagues

Meet the retired scientists who collaborate with younger colleagues

In the sixth and final episode of The Last few miles: planning for the late stage career in science, Julie Gould unpicks some of the generational tensions that can arise in academia when a colleague a...

26 Jul 202419min

Populært innen Business og økonomi

lydartikler-fra-aftenposten
stopp-verden
dine-penger-pengeradet
e24-podden
rss-penger-polser-og-politikk
rss-borsmorgen-okonominyhetene
livet-pa-veien-med-jan-erik-larssen
pengepodden-2
finansredaksjonen
pengesnakk
tid-er-penger-en-podcast-med-peter-warren
stormkast-med-valebrokk-stordalen
utbytte
morgenkaffen-med-finansavisen
liberal-halvtime
okonomiamatorene
rss-politisk-preik
rss-markedspuls-2
lederpodden
rss-sunn-okonomi