Profile
Kim Hannula is a 40-ish geology professor at a public liberal arts college in the Rockies. Her New Year's resolution is to reduce stress by changing her rheology, or maybe by walking to work and looking at the pretty mountains.
Search
Sb/DonorsChoose Drive
Thanks!
Recent Posts
- Bloggers at the American Geophysical Union meeting
- What experiences bring minority students into the geosciences - and what ones drive them away?
- Geologic causes vs geologic triggers
- Slumgullion movement due to atmospheric pressure?
- The amazing generosity of geoscience readers
- Getting kids into the Earth Sciences - last call for Donors Choose challenge
- Effective recruitment, retention, and promotion of women & minorities in the geosciences: a session report
- GSA update: spatial thinking about hot springs near normal faults
- Why scientific meetings?
- The Great California Shake Out, and the World Series Quake... 20 years later
Recent Comments
- kilo aldırıcı on What experiences bring minority students into the geosciences - and what ones drive them away?
- Maria-José Viñas on Bloggers at the American Geophysical Union meeting
- acai on What experiences bring minority students into the geosciences - and what ones drive them away?
- Lab Lemming on What experiences bring minority students into the geosciences - and what ones drive them away?
- Kim Hannula on What experiences bring minority students into the geosciences - and what ones drive them away?
- M Fuhrman on What experiences bring minority students into the geosciences - and what ones drive them away?
- Anne Jefferson on What experiences bring minority students into the geosciences - and what ones drive them away?
- DNLee on What experiences bring minority students into the geosciences - and what ones drive them away?
- Marcus on Geologic causes vs geologic triggers
- Garry Hayes on What experiences bring minority students into the geosciences - and what ones drive them away?
Archives
- November 2009
- October 2009
- September 2009
- August 2009
- July 2009
- June 2009
- May 2009
- April 2009
- March 2009
Blogroll
Geoblogs
- Accidental Remediation
- The Accretionary Wedge
- Arizona Geology
- Beyond the Moho
- Christie at the Cape
- Chuck Bailey's Blog
- Clastic Detritus
- Cr!key Creek
- Dinochick Blog
- Dino Jim's Musings
- The Dynamic Earth
- Earth and Mind
- Earthly Musings
- Eruptions
- The Ethical Paleontologist
- Geologic Frothings
- Geology News
- Geotripper
- Green Gabbro
- Harmonic Tremors
- Highly Allochthonous
- Hypo-theses
- Jill Schneiderman
- Johannes Lochmann
- Landslides under Microscope
- Looking for Detachment
- Lounge of the Lab Lemming
- The Lost Geologist
- Magma Cum Laude
- More Grumbine Science
- Mountain Cat Geology
- The Musings of a Life-Long Scholar
- Ni-eosyncline
- NOVA Geoblog
- Oblate Spheroid
- Olelog
- On the Slide
- The Reef Tank
- Ripples in Sand
- Rising to the Occasion
- Roads of Stone
- Ron Schott's Geology Home Companion
- Sismordia
- Stories in Stone
- Teaching the Earth Sciences
- Through the Sandglass
- The Volcanism Blog
- Wooster Geologists
- Adventures in Ethics and Science
- Aguanomics
- Aquafornia
- The Big Picture
- Chance of Rain
- Coyote Crossing
- Female Science Professor
- The Intersection
- John Fleck
- Open Mind
- Real Climate
- Sciencewomen
- USGS image gallery
- USGS earthquakes
- Global Volcanism Program
- USGS river conditions
- Ron Blakey's paleogeographic maps
- Rick Allmendinger's software
- OneGeology
- Map-a-Planet
- Geological Society of America
- American Geophysical Union
- Mineralogical Society of America
- Association for Women Geoscientists
- Council on Undergraduate Research
- National Association of Geoscience Teachers
- Science Education Resource Center
Other blogs
Geolinks
« The Great California Shake Out, and the World Series Quake... 20 years later | Main | GSA update: spatial thinking about hot springs near normal faults »
Why scientific meetings?
Category: conferences
Posted on: October 18, 2009 11:55 AM, by Kim Hannula
I spent a lot of yesterday morning looking through the program, making plans for the rest of the week. (And no, I haven't followed through on all of them. That would have been impossible unless I could clone myself, unfortunately.) But although I am terrible about making plans and following through on them, the process made me think about the different things that people want to get out of meetings.
These days, I come to meetings for several reasons:
1) To get better at teaching content. I've been teaching at undergraduate institutions for 16 years now. Yes, we do research, and our administrators claim that the goal of doing the research is to keep up with the field. But I teach six undergraduate courses a year, and they aren't all in my research specialty. In fact, in any class, I probably only spend a few days talking about things that I've worked on myself. The rest of the time, I'm teaching students about ideas generated by other people. I've learned about those ideas in classes myself, but it's been 20 years since I started grad school. Ideas change. Over the past few years, I've started to wonder whether the framework that I use to explain ideas (especially about things like active faults, which I've never worked on myself) are... well, maybe not wrong, exactly, but misleading, or unproductive in terms of generating the ideas that will be important in the next 20 years. Meetings like this are my chance to learn where my discipline is going. (Yes, I could read more papers in journals. This is more fun.)
2) To get better at teaching, period. There's a lot of great research on how students learn in the geosciences these days. How do those nebulous "spatial thinking skills" really work, and how do people learn them? These day, it's the pedagogy that gets me thinking creatively.
3) To give me ideas for my own research. Or at least, to keep from falling so far behind that my papers will get laughed out of an editor's office. After 16 years, sometimes it feels like I have to sprint to stay at the back of the pack. So I come to meetings, and get ideas, and then need to finish my own projects... when I have time. (Ha.)
4) To see people. Durango's great, but not many people come through. I've accumulated at lot of friends and acquaintances and mentors and mentees over the years, and this is where I see them. (And after about two hours of talks, this becomes my priority for a little while.) I should refer to this as "networking" - after all, these are people who might become collaborators, or who might become connections for my current students. But mostly it feels like socializing.
5) To meet people with whom I'm currently working. Ok, some of my "meeting people" time involves projects that I'm planning to start. Those face-to-face meetings are important. This really is networking.
6) To support my student(s). Presenting at a conference is a big step, especially for an undergraduate.
7) To present my own stuff. This seems like it should rank higher, but honestly? It was a much bigger deal earlier in my career, when I was trying to get established as a researcher and trying to get feedback on my ideas. These days, if I give a presentation, it's because I've got something that I want to share, but I don't expect to get much professionally from it.
Of course, my goals were different at other stages of my career. When I was a grad student, presenting my research was the most important thing in my world. When I was a new faculty member, I needed to meet the people who were important in my field, and impress them with my work. I've come to conferences with the goal of talking to people from funding agencies, or to apply for jobs, or to interview job candidates. Some of those approaches were the right ones at the time (and at some times, I was too shy and didn't network nearly enough).
And now... I should go hear a couple more talks about detachments. After the blog post goes up. (Note that live-blogging the meeting is not one of my goals. If I hear something that I want to think more about, and I have time between all my other goals... then I'll do it. Apologies to anyone who wants a good science journalist and is reading me instead!)
Find more posts in:
Education
Environment
Share this: Facebook Twitter Stumbleupon Reddit Email + More
TrackBacks
TrackBack URL for this entry: http://scienceblogs.com/mt/pings/122601





Comments
I go to meetings to get hammered with my friends!
Posted by: Comrade PhysioProf | October 18, 2009 12:45 PM
Agreed that presenting one's own work is the excuse for the more valuable aspects of the meeting. With email, asking expert peers about some weird observation or whatever* is instantaneous. the job of the meeting is to increase that pool of experts who you email about your areas of common interest...i.e., networking.
*[cough]grant review[/cough]
Posted by: DrugMonkey | October 22, 2009 10:19 AM
Agreed that Durango is a fantastic place but what you describe is one good reason for my having had an enriching experience in Denver. So many people came through town to go to Keystone Conferences and other ski-related meetings that we could often put together nice mini-symposia in any number of topical areas.
Hope you and your students had a productive and enjoyable time!
Posted by: Abel Pharmboy | October 22, 2009 12:09 PM