Personal account but share lots of fantastic work of RSC member networks - views all my own.
Lover of my kids, chemistry, Lego, Scotland and amazing but tiny museums.
Also vocal about autism, dyslexia, dysgraphia, Star Trek and crochet.
Fiona McMillan
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If houses had been set on fire *by* ethnic minority people, I suspect the BBC would have somehow rediscovered the active voice
I get the impression that some people aren't clear what this means. This is the UK state deciding to intervene directly in the healthcare of individual children, depriving them of medicine that their doctors have prescribed for their personal health & wellbeing, in defiance of global best practice.
He also was happy to see the jumper made from Dolly the Sheep's wool.
I survived 6 hours of coach travel with >50 10/11 yo kids to the science museum yesterday. As most of it was too overwhelming for my boy we mooched around as a pair seeing cool stuff and I even popped into the Star Trek at 60 shop to pick up my very own Captain Picard. The boy enjoyed the bus trip.
'That is a subtler story than the usual framing...one that institution-level data can never tell – a university can hit every access benchmark it has while individual departments quietly remain finishing schools, because the institutional aggregate launders the subject-level stratification.' 3/3
'That [access] is the big question lurking underneath Beyond access: how socioeconomic background shapes the chemistry pipeline, a cracking new report from the Royal Society of Chemistry (RSC) published to coincide with Social Mobility Day.' 1/3