Illustrated portraits

How taking part in extracurricular activities during your PhD can help you build your CV

2024-10-14T14:16:00+01:00By

Opportunities to take part in teaching, event organisation and outreach all develop valuable skills

Question mark with a plate with fork and knife at the bottom

Why we need public analysts

As the Association of Public Analysts winds up, Duncan Campbell reflects on the continued importance of the profession

Three hands with a cup in each hand on a polka dot background

Celebrating the coffee break

One of the most surprisingly productive parts of the day

Person looking through telescope in dollar banknote paper boat on top of wave

The importance of applying for funding early in your career

An empowering way to build a highly prized skill

Teaching enzymes new reactions through genetic code expansion and directed evolution

Anthony Green’s research group at the University of Manchester, UK, reengineers enzymes to have catalytic functions beyond those found in nature

On your best behaviour

Which might be different at work and at home

Will open science change chemistry?

While more researchers are adopting open access, open data, open peer review and open projects, some significant barriers are hindering progress

Highlights

Illustrated portraits

How taking part in extracurricular activities during your PhD can help you build your CV

Opportunities to take part in teaching, event organisation and outreach all develop valuable skills

Locks

Will open science change chemistry?

While more researchers are adopting open access, open data, open peer review and open projects, some significant barriers are hindering progress

A woman sits at a desk, typing on a laptop. Streaming out from the screen are colourful network symbols

The chroniclers of science

Communication officers dedicate their careers to telling impactful stories

An office full of people collaborating or working on computers

From baby boomers to gen Z, how do different generations approach chemistry?

Are differences in attitudes and training affecting science?

A chemical structure

Summer students act as an important catalyst for research

Investing in undergraduate projects advances science and develops future researchers

A character joyfully yells into a megaphone, from which coloured shapes, flowers and foliage emerges

How to get experience for science communication officer roles

Five tips to build your skills and see if it’s a career for you

A colourful graphic showing people sharing reports with each other, overlaid on a series of different types of charts

How to organise your data

Six tips for keeping your results in order

A cartoon of a hand holding a magnifying glass to a chemical flask that reveals icons like a microscope, finances, support, institutional reputation

How to choose a university chemistry course

Five tips to help you find the best undergraduate course for you

Two women wearing white lab coats, goggles and blue nitrile gloves look at a vial being held up by the person on the right. They are stood in a lab next to a fume hood

How to find and make the most of a summer placement

Five tips for optimising your taste of academic or industrial workplaces

A man stands at the front of a lecture theatre in front of several rows of students sat with papers on the benches in front of them. On the blackboard behind him is a chemical structure

How to teach university-level chemistry well

Five tips for educating and inspiring university students

A person with long dark hair wearing a yellow top transforms a tangled coil of white rope into a neat spiral

How to troubleshoot experiments

Six tips for solving problems in the lab

An illustrated portrait of Ijeoma Uchegbu

Ijeoma Uchegbu: ‘My approach is always to be kind’

The innovative nanoscientist on the power of kindness and how she scrubbed eugenicists from campus buildings

A surfer riding a very large wave

Inspiration on a surfboard and in the chemistry classroom

Sarah Gerhardt’s curiosity connects her passions for science, teaching and surfing

Emmeline Edwards

Emmeline Edwards: ‘I connect the dots’

The Haitian-American neurochemist on her journey from Haiti to the US as a teenager, and her journey from chemistry to brain science

People marching in a protest with placards that say Defiance for Science

US government scientist union scores latest contract win

Californian scientists have followed academics in unionising and have negotiated better pay and conditions

The striking truth

Better pay can benefit the whole research enterprise

Universities in the UK beat national average on gender pay gap but large discrepancies remain

Report estimates that in 14 years’ time women in higher education will be paid the same as men

Results of the RSC’s 2023 Pay and Reward survey

Financial and mental wellbeing are linked as many chemists feel the effects of the cost-of-living crisis