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Physicists and Chemists deliver message of "dead science" to British prime minister in the form of a coffin - http://t.co/pub1P2rn
2 days ago#Science is no exception. RT How broad networks drive Cdn science: http://t.co/FI4eJwdC #cdnpse, via @scienceadvocacy (via @UA_magazine)
4 days agoRT @ua_magazine: How broad networks drive Canadian science • http://t.co/KNz85Whc • via @scienceadvocacy
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- The Black Hole is Moving – Come join us at University Affairs
- More time doing research, less time applying for money – sounds great, right?
- CIHR Updates: Budget 2012 and Science Policy Fellowships
- A Difficult Pill to Swallow: The Harsh Realities of a 15% Funding Rate
- Quarterly Summary: Jonathan Thon starts with a flourish
This Quarter's Popular Posts
- 2011 Taxes for Post Docs: At least we know the rules this year (2,147)
- 2010 Canadian Taxes: Did you get your T2202 and T4a? (1,375)
- Academia vs. Industry: A former Postdoc’s perspective (1,365)
- 2012 Taxes for Postdocs: Dredging up the Past (1,047)
- Who do universities want to hire - scientists or politicians? (792)
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Tag Archives: Policy
University Affairs commentary on our CSPC panel
On November 30, University Affairs posted two articles that summarise and discuss the major issues that came up in our session at the 3rd Annual Canadian Science Policy Conference: Is Canada producing too many PhDs? Yes, no and maybe The … Continue reading
Posted in Education and Training, Policy
Tagged 2011 CSPC, Canada, CAPS, CIHR, CSPC, degrees, education, Graduate Student, Leo Charbonneau, life choices, Mehrdad Hariri, money, non-academic jobs, NSERC, PDF, PhD, Policy, Post Doc, postacademic jobs, Science, science and society, too many PhDs, Training, transferrable skills, University, University Affairs
4 Comments
Good news from the Border – Keeping international PhDs in Canada
QUICK REMINDER: For those that missed it, I’ll be chairing a session on the Education and Training of Scientists at this year’s Canadian Science Policy Conference in Ottawa next week. I posted on the topic a few weeks back and would … Continue reading
Posted in Education and Training
Tagged Canada, degrees, education, Employment, Government, Graduate Student, Immigration, Jason Kenney, life choices, PDF, PhD, Policy, Post Doc, postacademic jobs, Science, science and society, Training, University
1 Comment
What to do with all the Scientists… find out at the 2011 Canadian Science Policy Conference
In a break from normal lab routine, I’ll be dabbling in the black arts of science policy this November and running a session at the 3rd annual Canadian Science Policy Conference. The conference runs from Nov 16th-18th and features an … Continue reading
Posted in Education and Training, General, Policy
Tagged 2011 CSPC, Alan Bernstein, Angela Crawley, Canada, Canadian Association of Postdoctoral Scholars, Canadian Science Policy, Canadian Science Policy Conference, CAPS, Chad Gaffield, CIHR, CSPC, David Kent, education, Gary Goodyear, Government, Graduate Student, life choices, MITACS, money, non-academic jobs, NSERC, Olga Stachova, Ottawa, PDF, Penny Park, PhD, Policy, Post Doc, postacademic jobs, Science, science and society, science communication, Science Media Centre, SSHRC, Suzanne Fortier, Training, transferrable skills, University
5 Comments
Quarterly Summary: Guest Bloggers are Great!
This summer featured our second summer series. Last year’s “So you want to be a…” was followed up this year by “Notches in the STIC” which navigated through the key points of the Science and Technology Innovation Council’s recent report … Continue reading
Posted in General
Tagged Cambridge, Canada, CAPS, Council of Canadian Academies, CSaP, CSPC, education, Employment, fellowship, Government, Graduate Student, Marianne Stanford, Nassif Ghoussoub, non-academic jobs, Open Laboratory, PDF, PhD, Piece of Mind, Policy, Post Doc, postacademic jobs, Recruitment of Policy Leaders, Science, science and society, science communication, Science Technology and Innovation Council, SSHRC, Stem Cell Network, Summary, Training, University
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Adding Shades of Grey into Science Policy
I was forwarded two articles last month (thanks Mike O!) from the world of Australian science policy. In these articles, the debate centred on whether or not academics should be involved in making public policy. The article that started the … Continue reading
The 24/7 lab: Motivated scientists or slave-driving supervisors?
At the end of August, an article popped out from Nature News that sent many PhDs and postdocs into a tailspin. After asking 11 labs with a reputation for “working hard” and being allowed to visit just one of them, Heidi … Continue reading
Posted in Education and Training, Policy
Tagged 24/7 Lab, Alfredo Quinones-Hinojosa, Cambridge, Canada, degrees, education, Employment, Graduate Student, Heidi Ledford, life choices, money, Nature, non-academic jobs, PhD, Policy, Science, Training, University
2 Comments
Quick Hit: Recruitment of Policy Leaders Program to run Oct 3-17, 2011
The Government of Canada has released details of its 2011 Recruitment of Policy Leaders program. We’ve written before about becoming a public servant which contains information about this program and others in the Canadian Public Service. If you are aware of … Continue reading
Posted in Education and Training, Jobs, Policy
Tagged Canada, education, Employment, federal government jobs, Government, Government of Canada, life choices, money, non-academic jobs, PDF, PhD, Policy, Post Secondary Recruitment, postacademic jobs, Recruitment of Policy Leaders, Science, Training, transferrable skills, University
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Science in the federal government
Two recent news stories: 1. Ottawa silences scientist over West Coast salmon study “Top bureaucrats in Ottawa have muzzled a leading fisheries scientist whose discovery could help explain why salmon stocks have been crashing off Canada’s West Coast, according to … Continue reading
Posted in Jobs, Policy, Science Communication
Tagged Canada, federal government, federal government jobs, Government, Jobs, Policy, science and society, science communication
3 Comments
Final Notch in the STIC: How should we measure knowledge development?
With the goal of assessing the state of science and technology in Canada, it seems quite reasonable that the STIC report has identified the development of new knowledge as a key metric for assessing Canada’s relative and absolute performance. The … Continue reading
Posted in Policy, STIC Report Analysis
Tagged Canada, citations, Council of Canadian Academies, degrees, education, funding, Government, Mars Discovery District, money, Networks of Centres of Excellence, Policy, publications, relative impact index, Science, Science Technology and Innovation Council, STIC, Training, University, University of Quebec
4 Comments
Notch 4 in the STIC – The 30 year old question: Why does Canada lag in R&D spending?
Many reports have been written over the past 30 years about Canada and its R&D spending, and they clamour one after the other about Canada’s relative lack of investment into R&D. We’ve been through periods of deep cutbacks and periods … Continue reading
Posted in Financial, Jobs, Policy, STIC Report Analysis
Tagged business, Canada, Council of Canadian Academies, education, Employment, funding, Government, knowledge translation, money, Nortel, Policy, R&D, research and development, Research in Motion, Science, science and society, Science Technology and Innovation Council, Training, University
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