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Science Journalism Fellows
Fifteen science reporters, producers, and editors have been awarded Science Journalism Fellowships at the Marine Biological Laboratory this summer. This is the programs eighteenth year.
The MBLs Science Journalism Program offers print and broadcast journalists and editors an opportunity to step into the shoes of the people they cover by awarding them fellowships to study basic biomedical and environmental science at the MBL. During their residencies, Fellows learn what science is like from the inside out as students and researchers in MBL summer courses and laboratories. Two Fellows also travel with MBL scientists to the North Slope of Alaskas Brooks Range to learn more about environmental research being conducted at the Toolik Lake research site.
All fellows participate in one of two hands-on mini laboratory courses, each designed specifically for the non-scientist. One course explores techniques used in biomedical researchsequencing DNA, cloning, and PCR, for exampleand the other features research techniques currently in use by ecosystems ecologists both in the field and in the laboratory.
The recipients of MBL Science Journalism Fellowships in biomedical science are:
- Gino Del Guercio, documentary filmmaker
- Elizabeth DeVita, freelance
- Andrew Jordan, freelance producer
- Sanjay Kumar, freelance foreign correspondent, India
- Naomi Lubick, freelance
- Erik Mellgren, Reporter, Ny Teknik, Sweden
- Jordi Ortega, freelance TV news reporter-producer
- David Perlman, Science Editor, San Francisco Chronicle
The recipients of MBL Science Journalism Fellowships in environmental science are:
- Nicola Jones, Reporter, New Scientist Magazine, UK
- Sharon Levy, freelance
- Amanda Onion, Science Editor, ABCNEWS.com
- John Ryan, freelance
- Ilsa Setziol, Environment Reporter, Southern California Public Radio
- Natasha Singer, Correspondent, Outside Magazine
- Wendy Wolfson, freelance
MBL summer researcher and Northwestern University Professor Robert D. Goldman, and Knight Science Journalism Program Director and former Science Journalism Fellow, Boyce Rensberger, direct the Science Journalism Program. The Biomedical Hands-On Laboratory course is co-directed by Dr. Robert Palazzo, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, and Kerry Bloom, University of North Carolina. The Environment Hands-On Laboratory course is co-directed by Drs. Kenneth Foreman and Christopher Neill, both of the MBLs Ecosystems Center.
The 2003 MBL Science Journalism Program is supported in part by the American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, the American Society for Cell Biology, FASEB, the Howard Hughes Medical Institute, the Waksman Foundation for Microbiology, the National Science Foundation-Office of Polar Programs, NASA, U.S. Geological Survey, and The New York Times Company Foundation.
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