Hi ewelina, yes I have! I have been a teaching assistant during my undergraduate degree and my Master’s degree. I also really have enjoyed to teaching geology to young school children in the communities I have lived in.
Yes I do!
I was a demonstrator (teaching assistant) for the undergraduate 1st years in palaeontology and on one of their igneous/metamorphic geology field trips to Cornwall and I demonstrated for a 4th year palaeoceanography class this year too.
I also volunteer at the Natural History Museum in London each week and part of my volunteering involves teaching people of all ages (anyone from 3 upwards) about the science behind the projects that the scheme I’m with collaborates. I love this part as I get to meet so many different people and it’s lots of fun!!
Yes, I work with them all the time. I have supervised undergraduate and graduate students in research projects in Oklahoma and Puerto Rico. On the next three years, I and a colleague will take 12 students to Malawi in eastern Africa to study the East African Rift System, a place where the African continent is splitting in two!
Yes, it’s part as our training program. If we want to become professor or continue in an science, we have to “try”!
Personally, I have been working with student in the lab, where they had to do experiments after following my supervisor’s course.
Moreover, I followed few students in their Master thesis.
So far, I have been lucky and always found very interested (and prepared!) students.
Of course!
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Hi ewelina, yes I have! I have been a teaching assistant during my undergraduate degree and my Master’s degree. I also really have enjoyed to teaching geology to young school children in the communities I have lived in.
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Yes I do!
I was a demonstrator (teaching assistant) for the undergraduate 1st years in palaeontology and on one of their igneous/metamorphic geology field trips to Cornwall and I demonstrated for a 4th year palaeoceanography class this year too.
I also volunteer at the Natural History Museum in London each week and part of my volunteering involves teaching people of all ages (anyone from 3 upwards) about the science behind the projects that the scheme I’m with collaborates. I love this part as I get to meet so many different people and it’s lots of fun!!
0
Yes, I work with them all the time. I have supervised undergraduate and graduate students in research projects in Oklahoma and Puerto Rico. On the next three years, I and a colleague will take 12 students to Malawi in eastern Africa to study the East African Rift System, a place where the African continent is splitting in two!
0
Yes, it’s part as our training program. If we want to become professor or continue in an science, we have to “try”!
Personally, I have been working with student in the lab, where they had to do experiments after following my supervisor’s course.
Moreover, I followed few students in their Master thesis.
So far, I have been lucky and always found very interested (and prepared!) students.
0