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Women in Science

Women in Science

Written by: Women in Science
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Podcast by The University of Queensland

© 2026 The University of Queensland
Science
Episodes
  • Chaos and extremes
    Sep 17 2024
    Dr Meagan Carney works with chaos and extremes. As a mathematician, Meagan specialises in using machine learning to predict rare events — from hurricanes in the Gulf of Mexico to temperature extremes in Germany and Texas, all the way to bacterial infections in patients with COVID-19.At the heart of Meagan’s work is using mathematics and machine learning to make informed decisions, and navigate our increasingly complex, chaotic, dynamic world.Read more about Meagan's work: https://smp.uq.edu.au/profile/11136/meagan-carney
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    24 mins
  • STEMsational journey in science education
    Jul 18 2024
    Hemanshi Galaiya is a PhD student by day and a trailblazing entrepreneur by night. In this episode, Kirsty chats with Hemanshi about her inspiring journey from her childhood in Kenya to founding a transformative STEM education initiative, Young Stripes, to address educational inequities. Hemanshi shares stories from her early life, where a lack of resources fueled her creativity and love for science. Despite limited practical exposure, her curiosity drove her to pursue a degree in chemical engineering in the UK. Now balancing a PhD in Australia and managing her organisation remotely, Hemanshi discusses the future of Young Stripes and her dream of establishing Kenya’s first science museum. ---Donate now to support future episodes of Women in Science: justgiving.com/campaign/women-in-science-podcastRead more about Hemanshi’s work: https://aibn.uq.edu.au/article/2023/09/hemanshi-galaiya-stem-kids-synthetic-bio-and-building-future-kenya
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    26 mins
  • Getting schooled on education research
    May 16 2024
    Associate Professor Marnee Shay is a researcher in Education, specializing in Indigenous education, policy studies, flexi schooling and youth studies. Today, she reflects on her own experience in the Australian education system and the pivotal moments that led her from youth work to academia.Marnee and Kirsty also talk about non-conventional approaches to data collection, preserving Indigenous languages in Wakka Wakka country, and the importance of effecting policy change through research.And you’ll hear about the critical importance of research collaboration across STEM fields and the social sciences.This episode was recorded on Jaggera and Turrbal Country.Donate now to support future episodes of Women in Science: https://www.justgiving.com/campaign/women-in-science-podcastRead more about Marnee’s research: https://education.uq.edu.au/profile/2069/marnee-shay
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    29 mins
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