ACS AMA Hi Reddit! I’m Dr. Lily Raines, Manager of the Office of Science Outreach at the American Chemical Society. I completed my B.S. in Biochemistry with a Spanish minor at Eckerd College and my Ph.D. in Biochemistry, Cellular, and Molecular Biology at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine in the department of Biophysics and Biophysical Chemistry. I have been actively involved in science outreach throughout my scientific career, and my office manages both domestic and international outreach programs for ACS. I look forward to answering your questions about science outreach, including our upcoming Chemists Celebrate Earth Day event, which ACS has sponsored since 2003. This year, ACS’s nationwide celebration of the positive impact chemistry has had on society and the environment coincides with the March for Science, which ACS supports. At the March for Science event in Washington, D.C., our volunteers will host hands-on educational activities for kids during a teach-in on the National Mall in partnership with the Earth Day Network. In addition to this weekend’s activities, ACS also sponsors National Chemistry Week, which will celebrate its 30th anniversary this October, and Chemistry Festivals around the world. Ask me anything about these events, the importance of promoting public awareness and understanding of science, and ways you can have an impact in your communities. I’ll be back at 11:00 a.m. EDT (8:00 a.m. PDT, 3:00 p.m. UTC) to answer your questions. Thanks for having me today, /r/science! If you have any other questions about our Earth Day event, other ACS Outreach programs, or how generally how to get involved in science outreach, please email me at [email protected]. It’s now 12:10PM and I’m signing off, have a great day!

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Hey Reddit! We’re organizers from the March for Science, here to answer your questions about the March. The March for Science champions robustly funded and publicly communicated science as a pillar of human freedom and prosperity. We unite as a diverse, nonpartisan group to call for science that upholds the common good and for political leaders and policy makers to enact evidence based policies in the public interest. The March for Science got started with a reddit discussion on /r/politics about a Scientists’ March on Washington. We scientists took that initial interest and started a website and social media accounts to start recruiting. The march quickly gained hundreds of thousands of followers on social media and became the March for Science, an event planned to take place in over 400 cities across the globe, with hundreds of thousands of people expected to attend. More information about March for Science at marchforscience.com. We are: Dr. Jonathan Berman - National Co-Chair I’m a postdoctoral fellow at UTHSCSA. I study how the kidney reabsorbs sodium and the relationship between sodium reabsorption and blood pressure. I’m one of three national co-chairs for the March for Science, along with Dr. Caroline Weinberg, and Valorie Aquino. Dr. Rachael Holloway - National Diversity & Inclusion Lead I’m a clinical psychologist who specializes in behavioral medicine, trauma, and neurocognitive disorders. My graduate program has won national awards for its training in diversity and its rate of graduating underrepresented minority students. In my postdoctoral fellowship at VA San Diego/UCSD, I served on the diversity committee and completed mentorships in diversity and social justice advocacy. Miles Greb - Organizer of the Seattle March for Science. Sci Comm writer focused on returning optimism to science and science fiction. Creator of several comics designed to promote skepticism, scientific wonder, and a dedication to accurate science in literature. Organizing the the Satellite March for Science group in the beautiful city of Seattle Washington. Dr. Bryan Dunyak - Steering Committee, Chair of Marketing & Tech, March For Science - San Francisco I’m a postdoctoral fellow at the University of California at San Francisco. I study the role of cellular housekeeping mechanisms and their misregulation in cancer and neurodegeneration. I am passionate about science outreach; I have a long history working as a moderator with /r/science to encourage scientific discussion while helping to bridge the gap between practicing scientists and the public. We’ll be back at 1 pm EST to answer your questions, Ask Us Anything!
ACS AMA Hi Reddit! My name is Lindsay Johnson and I am a Ph.D. candidate in chemistry at the University of Minnesota (UMN). I received my B.S. in Chemistry from Virginia Tech in 2012; my undergrad and grad research has focused on developing, modifying, and characterizing polymers for enhanced drug delivery. I’m very active in my home Department of Chemistry, serving as the Student Seminar Series Committee Chair, and the chair for the Graduate Student Symposium Planning Committee. I have also been involved with the planning committees of several outreach events (for committees like our Women In Science and Engineering, etc). In the American Chemical Society, I serve on the Graduate Education Advisory Board, and was selected as a recipient of the ACS Younger Chemist Leadership Development Award in 2017 and so attended the ACS Leadership Development Institute in Dallas, TX earlier this year. Today I’d love to talk with you about professional development so you can make the most of your student program and then excel in your career! Whether you’re looking to get into academia, industry, science policy, business, or something else entirely, there are going to be certain critical skills necessary to be competitive in that field. I want to help you identify what those are! The process of building your own INDIVIDUAL DEVELOPMENT PLAN starts with identifying your career goals. Then you back-formulate what skill sets you will need. By mapping out a proactive plan to help you achieve your individual goals, you can then develop yourself to be a competitive applicant in your future. Some ideas on how to design your plan can be found in the ACS’s ChemIDP tool [https://www.acs.org/content/acs/en/education/students/graduate/gettingready/chemidp.html] I look forward to answering your questions on potential careers, available resources, development opportunities, how to get involved, or tailoring your resume. Ask me anything about professional development! I’ll be back to answer your questions at 11am CDT (12pm EDT, 9am PDT, 4pm UTC). 11:00 AM here in sunny MN! Let’s do this! 12:00 PM That’s all for now, folks! I’ll check back in later today to see if I can help answer any more questions. Best of luck in all of your professional endeavors!
Hi Reddit, My name is Kaitlin Raimi and I am an Assistant Professor at the Ford School of Public Policy at the University of Michigan. My research focuses on how people think and act when it comes to climate change, including how social motivations can promote or prevent sustainable solutions. I’m particularly interested in how people compare their own beliefs and behaviors to those of other people, how the desire to make a good impression can influence people to mitigate climate change, and how one adopting one sustainable behavior affects later environmental decisions. I also have ongoing work on how framing climate change in different ways affects people’s understanding of climate change and support for climate policies. Together with my colleagues Paul Stern and Alex Maki, I recently published a paper titled “The Promise and Limitations of Using Analogies to Improve Decision-Relevant Understanding of Climate Change” in the journal PLOS ONE. My name is Alex Maki and I am a Postdoctoral Research Fellow with the Vanderbilt Institute for Energy and Environment and the Vanderbilt Climate Change Research Network. My research uses theory-based behavior change interventions to understand and influence environmental (e.g., energy use), health (e.g., eating choices), and prosocial (e.g., volunteerism) behaviors. Specifically, I am interested in how interventions can help people initiate and maintain changes to multiple, related behaviors over time (e.g., both conserve energy and water at home). I also examine the social dynamics surrounding environmental behaviors, including who chooses to talk to other people (e.g., friends or family) about environmental issues, and how we can help people have more constructive conversations about important environmental issues, including climate change. My name is Paul Stern. For over two decades I was staff director of the Committee on the Human Dimensions of Global Change at the U.S. National Research Council. At the same time, I have been conducting research with colleagues outside the Council on topics that have included household energy consumption, the effectiveness of policies to reduce greenhouse has emissions by changing consumer behavior, and people’s understanding of various kinds of environmental risks. Understanding the risks of climate change is a real challenge because of its long-term nature and the difficulty of making confident predictions of what risks particular communities will face. This paper is part of an effort to find ways to help people think through the risks without having to understand all the scientific details. We wanted to know whether using analogies helps people understand key factors that are important for climate change decisions, including uncertainties about when and where serious damage may occur, its unprecedented and progressive nature, and trade-offs in limiting climate change. Specifically, across two studies, we looked at whether comparing climate change to medical decision-making, disaster preparedness, or courtroom trials helped people to understand these issues. We found that disaster preparedness and a courtroom trial analogy weren’t very helpful, and that none of the analogies helped people understand the basic science of climate change. However, we did find that comparing climate change to a medical decision helped people–especially political conservatives–to to better recognize several decision-relevant attributes of climate change. Follow Kaitlin on Twitter @KaitlinRaimi We will be back at 1 pm ET to answer your questions, ask us anything!