新澳门六合彩内幕信息

鈥楩ace to Face鈥 With Scientist aka Children鈥檚 Book Author

 

One of 新澳门六合彩内幕信息 Davis鈥 newest faculty members may be focused on researching the way the body sends signals about being cold, but she鈥檚 also writing a series of children鈥檚 books so kids from underrepresented minorities know they can be scientists.

Theanne Griffith
Griffith

鈥淎s a Black woman that was once a young Black girl, growing up in the nineties there weren鈥檛 a lot of books that had people that looked like me,鈥 said Theanne Griffith, an assistant professor of in the department of Physiology and Membrane Biology, in the School of Medicine. 鈥淎nd I don鈥檛 think I realized until I got older the consequence of that lack of representation on my confidence to be a successful scientist.鈥

Griffith is the second guest of Chancellor Gary S. May鈥檚 new talk show, . The episode was released today, and can be watched above or on . In the monthly series of video interviews, May said he talks with 鈥渟tudents, faculty and staff innovators about what they鈥檙e working on and how they鈥檙e making a difference in the real world.鈥

The show鈥檚 first guest was Akshita Gandra, a senior majoring in cognitive science who founded , an online publication focused on giving a voice to college students from around the country writing about feminism and social justice.

MORE ABOUT GRIFFITH

In the second episode, Griffith talks about moving to 新澳门六合彩内幕信息 Davis from the East Coast and setting up her lab in the middle of a pandemic, including the one hot-ticket piece of lab equipment she had to wait for. May asks for her 鈥渆levator pitch鈥 for her research, and she explains the way developing an over-sensitivity to cold from chemotherapy drugs makes some people want to stop that therapy.

They also discuss the unique way Griffith describes herself: neuroscientist and children鈥檚 book author. She is the author of , which her website describes as 鈥渁 modern-day Magic School Bus for chapter book readers鈥 ages 7-10. She wrote the first when she was on leave after having her first daughter in 2017, and sought to show a diverse group of children learning and taking a scientific approach to solving problems. Three books have been published so far, and the fourth, , is due out in October.

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Cody Kitaura is a News and Media Relations Specialist in the Office of Strategic Communications, and can be reached by email or at 530-752-1932.

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