• Question: What made you interested in science?

    Asked by anon-354119 on 13 Mar 2023.
    • Photo: Graeme Dykes

      Graeme Dykes answered on 13 Mar 2023:


      I have always been interested in technology. I love a bit of Sci-Fi on TV and in the movies.
      At school, my teachers really encouraged me

    • Photo: Jo Ellis

      Jo Ellis answered on 13 Mar 2023:


      Curiousity really,. As a child i was always thinking and asking why,. That’s where things started and I was looking at picture books for how things exist

    • Photo: Martin McCoustra

      Martin McCoustra answered on 13 Mar 2023:


      I’ve always had a look of curiosity about things around me. I want to understand how they work and in science I could start to learn more about that question.

    • Photo: Grace Roper

      Grace Roper answered on 13 Mar 2023:


      I enjoy learning new things. In science you’re constantly asking new questions and investigating the answers.

    • Photo: Alana McNulty

      Alana McNulty answered on 13 Mar 2023:


      I was constantly asking questions when I was younger (and still am!) about how things work and why. My dad also loved all things science and I remember him taking me to the Science and Industry museum in Manchester as a kid and absolutely loving it. So I think a mix of natural curiosity and wanting to learn more about as much as I could all helped.

    • Photo: Christy Sadler

      Christy Sadler answered on 13 Mar 2023:


      I have always been interested in science and how it can help make medical advances. I used to read the New Scientist magazine which gave me a good overview of cool things happening in the science world!

    • Photo: Nathalie Oguntona

      Nathalie Oguntona answered on 14 Mar 2023:


      As a child I was interested in how things work and I think this is fundamentally what drew me to science

    • Photo: Graeme Barker

      Graeme Barker answered on 14 Mar 2023:


      I always liked finding out how things worked, and that’s all science is, really!

    • Photo: Ai-Lan Lee

      Ai-Lan Lee answered on 14 Mar 2023:


      I loved the process of asking questions about how things worked and then trying to figure out how they worked! The experimental side to it also added to the excitement.

    • Photo: Arno Kraft

      Arno Kraft answered on 19 Mar 2023:


      It’s exciting. You start with solving little problems (for example, for the next class), then a few years later you you use your knowledge and skills to solve bigger problems in research.

Comments