Why strong mentorship was essential for my career success in science

Why strong mentorship was essential for my career success in science

JoAnn Trejo co-leads the Faculty Mentor Training Program at the University of California, San Diego (UCSD) medical school, where, thanks to her efforts, the number of tenure-track faculty members from under-represented groups shot up by 38% from 2017 to 2022.

Trejo, a pharmacologist whose research helps to develop drugs to treat vascular diseases, says her mentor colleagues understand that their mission and responsibility is training the next generation of scientists and providing opportunities for them. She describes the people who supported her at the early career stage, and the impact they had. “When I reflect on my life and I think about how a poor Mexican American farm worker kid from an impoverished background, became a scientist professor, it’s actually extraordinary,” she says.


Trejo is the seventh researcher to feature in this eight-part Changemakers podcast series. It accompanies an ongoing Nature Q&A series that highlights scientists who fight racism in science and champion inclusion at work.


Listen to launch editor Kendall Powell discuss the series' aims and objectives with Deborah Daley, global chair of Springer Nature's Black Employee Network.

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

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Episoder(229)

How jazz boosts my creativity in physics

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Hit a lab project glitch? Thinking about your thesis title like a storyteller can help you focus

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22 Mai 16min

Running a farm, pursuing a research career: what’s the difference?

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How a passion for baking fermented a fresh career move

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How sewing can set you up for failure and success in science

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30 Apr 18min

Hit a glitch in your research? Some ‘night science​​​​​​​’ thinking could move it forward

Hit a glitch in your research? Some ‘night science​​​​​​​’ thinking could move it forward

The French biologist and Nobel prizewinner François Jacob talked about day and night science as part of the creative process that underpins research. The former, he argued in his 1988 autobiography, i...

23 Apr 22min

How to thrive in science when you move abroad 

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Among the barriers faced by researchers who move abroad to develop their careers is a so-called “hidden curriculum,” says Sonali Majumdar, whose book, Thriving as an International Scientist, was publi...

9 Apr 36min

How procrastination can rob you of career fulfilment in science

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Simon May describes his 2025 book Jump! as a new approach to conquering procrastination. Unlike self-help manuals that urge readers to break tasks down into manageable chunks with clear deadlines, May...

1 Apr 29min

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