Tag Archives: scientist

How on Earth did I get into a PhD program

Really though, someone please tell me how I did it.. especially at my dream school….

For the past few years I have been saying I would apply and then it came time to actually apply and interview…. then overnight it seems I became a future PhD candidate. But the thing was it wasn’t overnight.

Though I see myself as a slightly average PhD applicant, I showed my dedication to research over the years. I’ve had some substantial experiences that have stuck with me and I am passionate about specific areas of research.

I want to briefly note how I think I got in with my less than perfect grades and GRE scores (though that exam may be a thing of the past anyways). This will probably change as I actually start my program but this is how I think I got into Columbia Univ’s program:

Quality over Quantity

I had a few unique laboratory experiences that seemed all over the place but they were experiences that I learned a great amount of information and put a great amount of work into. I was also able to talk passionately about them during my interview. Surprisingly, the interviewers were more interested in my lab work in a plant diagnostic laboratory than one of my higher profile cancer laboratories

Be Unique

This leads me to my next point was that I was unique. I was non traditional and had a unique set of skills to bring to the table. I was artistic, active in sports, and causes that I care about. I didn’t trap myself in lab all day, I went out and lived my life and had a good work life balance.

I am (or at least try to be) a good scientific writer

I had a lot of writing experiences from writing protocols to assisting with writing grants with my PIs. I had a lot of writing under my belt and still keep up with it to this day. Also proofread the fuck out of your personal statement.

I can talk science

I had a lot of practice during my Masters program with presentations and talking about scientific papers and research which the interviews seemed to really like. Talk with confidence and talk like you know what you’re talking about. Just try it out and even if you are wrong it will be okay, it is way better than not trying at all.

I own my whole identity

This is something that has just helped with my confidence in general. I walked into my interview with my two nose piercings, queer af, and being my apologetically black self. This showed them that I owned every part of myself and was confident as a person already. Maybe they liked it, maybe they didn’t but confidence always gets you where you need to go.

Why I’m Quitting my Research Job in Academia- Young Black Scientist

Tomorrow is my last day in academia. I am very ready to leave and heal from the trauma I’ve endured during my almost 3 years of doing full time research. Unfortunately when I scower the internet, a lot of other black scientists, doctors, and students are doing the same. We feel there is no space for us in this seemingly posh academia world as even the brightest students are worn down to their core in these settings. But why? Why does it seem like we don’t belong in these settings? Why is discrimination, racism, sexism, and overall poor treatment seen as the norm?

Faculty members and lab managers have watched me be screamed at inappropriately, I’ve been tugged, and pulled. Sexual remarks seem to be overtly present when it comes to black students compared to my non-black peers. For a while, I felt that all of this was my fault. I felt like I didn’t want to exist anymore because of how I was treated on a daily basis. But with the help of a solid friend group, my therapist, mentors, and medication I was able to see the light again. And now I want to get to the bottom of this problem.

It’s definitely going to take me more than one blog post to get all of my thoughts down about this issue but the least I can do is start…

We can’t do research about the issues affecting our community.

Recent research has suggested that there is a racial disparity in grant funding for African-American/Black scientists, most of which could be due to their research choice. Now, just like any scientist, I want to find the answers to problems in the world. these problems usually are significant to me as they are something I witness everyday, most of which reside in black communities. However, this new research shows that you are less likely to be funded if your topic has key words such as disparities and socioeconomic.

How can we be expected to continue our work as scientists but be forced to perform it from a Caucasian perspective. It infuriates me that this is so prevalent when research and medicine should work to serve all members of its community. How are we expected to be successful as scientists if we can’t work on what we are passionate about because unfortunately without funding in science the research simply can’t be conducted.

This lead me down a research rabbit hole where I learned about white empiricism.

White empiricism is the phenomenon through which only white people (particularly white men) are read has having a fundamental capacity for objectivity and Black people (particularly Black women) are produced as an ontological other. This phenomenon is stabilized through the production and retention of what Joseph Martin calls prestige asymmetry, which explains how social resources in physics are distributed based on prestige. In American society, Black women are on the losing end of an ontic prestige asymmetry whereby different scientists “garner unequal public approbation” in their everyday lives due to ascribed identities such as gender and race (Martin 2017, 475). White empiricism is one of the mechanisms by which this asymmetry follows Black women physicists into their professional lives. Because white empiricism contravenes core tenets of modern physics (e.g., covariance and relativity), it negatively impacts scientific outcomes and harms the people who are othered.

There has actually been a lot of controversy over this paper by Prescod-Weinstein. The author argues that scientific research (in this case physics) is not as objective as we are primed to believe. What caught my eye was “unequal public approbation” or unequal public praise from the white scientists in every field. Their topics and research studies are seen as very objective and then are praised with recognition and funding that allow them to continue their research. Where as performing research on health disparities and other issues from minority communities may not be seen as such.

Critics say that there are major flaws in saying that racism affects empirical data. They see that fact is fact no matter who discovered it. Many critics say that it is a form of hypocrisy and see no persuasiveness of racism on scientific discovery.

I of course disagree with the critics and believe that racism has always persuaded scientific research and has shaped the current world of science because of it. It is so obvious as it is still seen today as the “top researches” in most STEM fields are white men and women. That is no coincidence.

As long as we keep believing that racism and underlying biases don’t affect the scientific community, the bigger these problems get leading to negative impacts on the black community as a whole.

All of the research I have been looking into has shown me how academia views black scientists and research about our community. I wonder if its not taken seriously enough. Are there just not black people on these grant approving committees so its just not even crossing their minds? How can we get more black people in these positions so we can actually start diversifying scientific research?

There is so much more I want to dive into. This new job change and how much it was needed for me was a big wake up call. I am excited for this new journey and to hopefully have the space to answer my questions outside of academia.