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posted by martyb on Thursday October 27 2016, @10:47PM   Printer-friendly
from the choose:-fed-up-or-starving? dept.

Tingley is one of many young scientists who are deeply frustrated with life in research. In September, Nature put a post on Facebook asking scientists who were starting their first independent position to tell us about the challenges that they faced. What followed was a major outpouring of grief. Within a week, nearly 300 scientists from around the world had responded with a candid catalogue of concerns. "I see many colleagues divorcing, getting burnt out, moving out of science, and I am so tired now," wrote one biomedical researcher from Belgium (see 'Suffering in science'). Nature selected three young investigators who voiced the most common frustrations; here, we tell their stories.

But are young scientists whining — or drowning? Our interviewees acknowledge that they are extremely fortunate to have an opportunity to direct their own creative, stimulating careers, and they are hardly the only professionals who are expected to work hard. It's easy for each generation to imagine that things are more difficult for them than they were in the past.

But some data and anecdotal evidence suggest that scientists do face more hurdles in starting research groups now than did many of their senior colleagues 20–30 years ago. Chief among those challenges is the unprecedented number competing for funding pools that have remained stagnant or shrunk in the past decade. "The number of people is at an all-time high, but the number of awards hasn't changed," says Jon Lorsch, director of the US National Institute of General Medical Sciences (NIGMS) in Bethesda, Maryland. "A lot of people with influence on the system recognize this is a serious problem and are trying to fix it."

It seems we can spend trillions of dollars on wars, or on science, but not both.


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  • (Score: 1) by zugedneb on Friday October 28 2016, @12:29AM

    by zugedneb (4556) on Friday October 28 2016, @12:29AM (#419657)

    dunno, if we speak about the "civilized" world and not the "devastated/colonialised", the education if good.

    I come from commie country, and education was good.
    Now live in scandinavia, and education is good...

    Compared to the problems they inherited, chine and most of asia is also ok.
    Usa and Canada is not the dumbest either...

    So I would not call 95% trash, but it is kind of strange, that "fuel the shopping" is still the main mentality behind stuff, even in private conversations amongst the 1337...

    --
    old saying: "a troll is a window into the soul of humanity" + also: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Operation_Ajax
  • (Score: 1, Insightful) by Anonymous Coward on Friday October 28 2016, @12:56AM

    by Anonymous Coward on Friday October 28 2016, @12:56AM (#419668)

    The problem is that people who received a terrible education are less likely to recognize that their education was terrible, so you end up with uneducated people defending abysmal school systems which rely too much on rote memorization and refuse to recognize the rote memorization. The gap in quality between the greatest schools and the mid-range schools is far too large.