
Working Scientist: Muddle of the middle: More support needed to survive the mid-career stage in science
Mid-career scientists need targeted training and development from funders and employers. Some are starting to provide it. 26 Oct 2022
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Working Scientist: Muddle of the middle: Mid-career scientists: advice to our younger selves
What is it like to be a mid-career scientist? Five researchers field questions from junior colleagues, and describe what they
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Working Scientist: Muddle of the Middle: Why the mid-career stage in science can feel like a second puberty
A philosopher and a behavioural economist suggest some remedies to tackle the “muddle of the middle”. 12 Oct 2022
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Working Scientist: Muddle of the Middle: Burnout and breakdowns: how mid-career scientists can protect themselves
Trying to achieve a perfect work–life balance is a misguided strategy at the mid-career stage, Julie Gould discovers. 5 Oct
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Working Scientist: Muddle of the middle: When life gets in the way of scientists’ mid-career plans
Many scientists switch sectors mid-career and often face life-changing challenges at the same time. These include illness, divorce and caring
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Working Scientist: Muddle of the middle: why mid-career scientists feel neglected
How do you define ‘mid-career’ in academia? Funders, governing bodies and working scientists debate a vexed question. 21 Sept 2022
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Working Scientist: Beyond Academia: The Dutch city where industry–academia collaborations flourish
Eindhoven University of Technology was set up to partner with local companies. Mutual trust and a respect for academic freedom
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Working Scientist: Beyond academia: how to “de-risk” a mid-career move to industry
How do you convince an academic employer that you’re a safe bet, despite having no experience in the sector? Julie
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Working Scientist: Beyond academia: how to select your first scientific role in industry
The sector is broad, ranging from tiny start-ups to huge multinationals. Choose wisely. 16 Feb 2022
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Working Scientist: Beyond academia: debunking the industry–academia barrier myth
Some researchers run both academic labs and companies, challenging the idea that the two sectors operate in silos. 9 Feb
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Working Scientist: Beyond academia: Planning the perfect exit strategy for a scientific career move
If academic research isn’t for you, when is the best time to switch sectors? Industry insiders offer their advice. 2
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Working Scientist: Beyond academia: Breaking down the barriers that curtail industry collaborations and career moves
How porous is the metaphorical membrane between academia and industry? Julie Gould finds out. 26 Jan 2022
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Working Scientist: How the pandemic widened scientists’ mentoring networks
Virtual meetings enabled researchers to look beyond departments, institutions and sectors for career support, Julie Gould discovers. 21 Oct 2021
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Working Scientist: How to keep the scientific-mentoring magic alive
Some relationships last decades. How can they withstand the combined tests of time, geography and career stage? 14 Oct 2021
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Working Scientist: The many mentoring types explained
Reverse mentoring, peer-to-peer, group sessions. Choose one or more to tackle a tough career transition. 6 Oct 2021
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Working Scientist: Mentoring, coaching, supervising: what’s the difference?
Julie Gould explores the tools, roles and techniques that help researchers to reach career goals. 29 Sept 2021
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Working Scientist: How COVID-19 changed scientific mentoring
Many mentors have had to rethink their approach as the pandemic has made physical meetings impossible.
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Working Scientist: The mentoring messages that can get lost in translation
The scientific workplace can be a melting pot of different cultures and mentoring styles, leading to some interesting lab dynamics.
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Working Scientist: Why science needs strong mentors
Scientist mentors describe how supporting junior colleagues alongside many other responsibilities is a true labour of love. 8 Sept 2021
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Working Scientist: The postdoc career journeys that date back to kindergarten
Julie Gould explores professional identity and motivation by asking five researchers how they keep a childhood love of science alive,
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Working Scientist: Kindness alone won’t improve the research culture
Postdocs and other early-career researchers need better trained lab leaders, not just nicer ones, Julie Gould discovers.
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Working Scientist: Planning a postdoc before moving to industry? Think again
Experience as a postdoctoral researcher might not fast-track your career outside academia, Julie Gould discovers.
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Working Scientist: The career costs of COVID-19
How postdocs and PhD students are paying the price. Closed labs and rescinded job offers have snatched away opportunities. I
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Working Scientist: Stop the postdoc treadmill… I want to get off!
I investigate how brain drains and demographic time bombs are forcing some countries to rethink the postdoc.
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Working Scientist: Why life as a postdoc is like a circling plane at LaGuardia Airport
What is a postdoc and why undertake one? I get some metaphorical answers to a complicated question.
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The state of the pandemic, six months in
Lockdowns are lifting but global infections are still rising. We take stock as we enter the next chapter of the
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The Surgisphere scandal that rocked coronavirus drug research
The latest from the hydroxychloroquine saga, as a questionable dataset threatens trust in science and forces major journals to review
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Fighting the misinformation pandemic
With questionable coronavirus content flooding airwaves and online channels, what’s being done to limit its impact?
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The race to expand antibody testing
The role of antibody tests in controlling the pandemic, how public-health spending could curtail an economic crisis, and the efforts
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Ramping up responses: The effect of the COVID-19 outbreak on research animals
The latest on the British response, and what have low- and middle-income countries done to prepare for the pandemic.
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How apartheid’s legacy can still cast a shadow over doctoral education in South Africa
PhD programmes in "the rainbow nation" mostly lead to academic careers, but reform is needed to boost collaboration and integration,
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The PhD thesis and how to boost its impact
The thesis is a central element of how graduate students are assessed. But is it time for an overhaul? Julie
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Team PhD
Scientific research is not the endeavour of a single person. It requires a team of people. How can this be
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It’s time to fix the one-size-fits-all PhD
Julie Gould asks six higher education experts if it's now time to go back to the drawing board and redesign
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Too many PhDs too few research positions
Students need to be clear about their reasons for pursuing a PhD and the career options open to them, Julie
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The award-winning neuroscientist who blazes a trail for open hardware
Tom Baden's work into the neuroscience of vision has earned him the inaugural Nature Research Award for Driving Global Impact.
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How to inspire young women to consider scientific careers
Two projects aimed at boosting female representation in STEM have won the second Nature Research Awards for Inspiring Science and
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Challenges and opportunities for materials researchers in China
China is looking to lure young materials researchers from other nations, but its trade war with the US could hamper
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Start looking for jobs before you finish your PhD
Gaia Donati and Julie Gould discuss some of the career issues faced by physicists today.
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Switching scientific disciplines
Moving to a new branch of science is scary, but learning new skills and collaborating with different colleagues can be
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The school physics talk that proved more popular than Lady Gaga’s boots
Media interest in particle physics and the Large Hadron Collider boosted Jon Butterworth's interest in public engagement, reports Julie Gould.
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Career transitions from physics to data science
Industry has long courted physicists for their data science expertise, but will this change as more undergraduates acquire these skills?
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Global career moves, and how to survive them
Moving abroad is a fact of life for many scientists. Astrophysicist Elizabeth Tasker offers some advice.
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Why physics is still a man’s world, and how to change it
Julie Gould hears how a technical university in the Netherlands took radical measures to boost the number of female academics.
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Talking about a technological revolution in the lab
https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-019-01499-7
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Slack, and other technologies that are transforming lab life
Ben Britton says the online collaboration and communication tool has changed his lab for the better.
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How technology can help solve science’s reproducibility crisis
Machine learning and data management skills can raise your scientific profile and open up career opportunities, Julie Gould discovers.
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Science and government, Canadian Style
Mona Nemer tells Julie Gould about her role as Canada's chief scientific adviser and how she aims to strengthen science
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Learn to code to boost your research career
Learning how to code brings career benefits and helps science by aiding reproducibility, Julie Gould discovers.
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Why universities are failing to embrace AI
Mark Dodgson and Lee Cronin discuss the revolutionary potential of artificial intelligence on university teaching, research, and scientific careers.
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Love science, loathe coding? Research software engineers to the rescue
Simon Hettrick tells Julie Gould about the role of research software engineers, what they do and how you can become
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The grant funding lottery and how to fix it
Many grant funding decisions are random, with luck playing a large part. How can the system be improved, particularly when
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How to beat research funding’s boom and bust cycle
How governments decide when to boost basic research funding, and when to scale back support.
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How to navigate the UK’s new research funding landscape
An expert guide for early career researchers to UK Research and Innovation, the UK's new central funding agency.
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Grant application essentials
Expert advice on how to get the details of a grant submission right, and planning for "curveball questions" if you
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How to plan a successful grant application
Julie Gould investigates the importance of advance planning when you're preparing a funding application.
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Inside the NIH grant-review process
Elizabeth Pier tells Julie Gould about her research into agreement levels among reviewers evaluating the same NIH grant applications.
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Salary and job satisfaction in science
Chris Woolston and Julie Gould discuss the findings of Nature's 2018 salary and job satisfaction survey
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Women in physics, women in Africa
Two female researchers tell Julie Gould about their efforts to inspire other women to become scientists
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A winning team of innovators who promote women in science
The Association of Hungarian Women in Science (NaTE) has won Nature Research's inaugural Innovation in Science Award.
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Lean PhD programmes, and a conversation with Lego Grad Student
Lego Grad Student is the alter ego of an early career researcher whose schadenfreude-laden Twitter posts "capture an adult's distress
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With a PhD you can do anything
UK careers consultant Sarah Blackford describes how a "SWOT analysis" of your skills can identify strengths, weaknesses, opportunities and threats
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Another country, and how to fit in
Career mobility is a fact of life in science and there are plenty of opportunities to study and work abroad.
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How to track the “lost generation” of scientists
In this podcast Bourguignon and two of his fellow panel members tell Julie Gould how better career tracking data from
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Naturejobs podcast: How to run a creative and diverse PhD programme
In May this year I spoke at the 2018 ORPHEUS meeting about the diversity in PhD training. Whilst I was
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Naturejobs Podcast: Women in science
Patriarchy, leaky pipelines, and the “two body problem” In the June 2018 Naturejobs podcast we focus on women in science.
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Naturejobs Podcast: Science, sickness and dyslexia
People don't need to let sickness and dyslexia stand in their way of doing science. Julia Hubbard, a research fellow
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Naturejobs podcast: How to be a consummate networker
Networking can have benefits at any stage of your career, say Peter Fiske and Alaina Levine. There’s nothing sleazy about
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Naturejobs podcast: Stars of the yeast
If you’re not loving what you do, try something new. That’s the message both from Ricardo Wilches and Eyal Schwartz. The two researchers
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Naturejobs podcast: Family life, career life: Making it work
Transitioning from academia to industry is a common direction for a career move. But it is possible to move the
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Naturejobs Podcast: A fresh start
Transferable skills are beneficial at any career stage, whether starting out or retiring. The first Naturejobs podcast of 2018, A
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Naturejobs podcast: Meaningful mentoring
The Naturejobs team put together a podcast that reflects the importance of top quality mentoring and coaching to early career researchers.
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Naturejobs podcast: Life in the PhD lane
The Naturejobs team looks at careers in sports science and life as a PhD student in 2017 following publication of Nature’s biennial PhD survey.
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Naturejobs podcast: How to start and run a lab
Two researchers share their experiences in how to start and run a well-managed science research lab. Starting a lab can
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Naturejobs podcast: Sacrifices for science
A wide range of initiatives exist to help early career researchers achieve their goals, but there are practical challenges and
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Naturejobs Podcast: Planning your time and your goals
Time planning and goal setting can make your work and career planning more efficient, as well as help you prioritise
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Let’s Dive In: Where do colours come from?
Who doesn't love a good rainbow? There’s something so magical about them. Red and Orange and Yellow and Green and
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Let’s Dive In: Blast them pirates!
Ahoy me hearties! In this episode we be talking explosions with ye. OK. I give up. I don't think I’d
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Let’s Dive In – Where does our voice come from?
Some of us (nod to Phil) enjoy a good chat. We could talk for Ireland, so they say. Others have
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Let’s Dive In! – Episode 1
Scientists Phil Smyth and Julie Gould introduce "Let's Dive In", their upcoming RTÉjr Radio Podcast, in video form! They take
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