• Question: What make your work stand out from the other scientists' work?

    Asked by Josie :D (LOLZ) to Hephzi, Imogen, Jen, Jennifer, Tom on 9 Mar 2015.
    • Photo: Jennifer Rudd

      Jennifer Rudd answered on 9 Mar 2015:


      Mine stands out because I’m making things that nobody has ever made before and running experiments on them that nobody has ever run before. Although a lot of people are working on the same problem as I am, I take a different approach to everyone else. Everyone’s science is unique once they reach the graduate level 🙂

    • Photo: Thomas Barrett

      Thomas Barrett answered on 9 Mar 2015:


      How my work stands out is that there is me and one other person in the entire world looking at these particular rocks for water. We are in a contest to get the best science at the moment. I also have a slightly more powerful machine than his so I really am the cutting edge of my field in terms of equipment and ways we try to do things.

    • Photo: Hephzi Tagoe

      Hephzi Tagoe answered on 10 Mar 2015:


      Everyone’s work is unique and stands out in its own way. There’s probably no one else working on your project so it’ll stand out. Specifically for my project, lots of people suffer with dry ski and no one knows what causes it. I’ll be making a difference to the lifestyle of many and that’s pretty unique.

    • Photo: Jen Machin

      Jen Machin answered on 13 Mar 2015:


      I agree with Hephzi, everyone’s project is different so you could argue that they all stand out! I’d argue that mine stands out because memory is important – without it, none of us would be able to remember what experiments to do or what we’d learnt! 🙂 And the more we know about memory, the better.

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