About
I’m Annabel, a zoologist and science communicator on the brink of stepping into the ‘real world’. The last four years of my life have taken place in and around the University of Sheffield, England, where I’ve been a student in the Department of Animal and Plant Sciences. I’ve also gained experience at National Geographic Kids and, as I graduate, am hoping to seek out more and more writing opportunities.
Throughout my life, I’ve grown from a child fascinated with all
things that crawl and run and swoop, to a teenager who wanted nothing more than
to be up a mountain or at a zoo, to a grown woman with a first class Bachelor’s
degree in Zoology, and a (pending) Masters in Science Communication. Like
anyone else, I changed career ideas several times during this time (my brother
is still convinced that one day I’ll become a zookeeper) – but there’s always
been one thing that I’ve loved more than anything else. Biology, surely? I hear
you ask. Nope – a love of all things words.
Writing is the way I process the world best. Reading was the
love that came first, and then, as soon as I could, writing. From notebooks
half-started, to bird books I made myself, to full blown stories of novel-length
proportions, I’ve always been writing something. First fiction, mostly
for myself, and now, increasingly, non-fiction for others.
The thing about writing is that, in the right hands, it’s
such a powerful tool. Not just for conveying information, but for conveying
enthusiasm, excitement, passion – and this is something that science
really needs. With social media making it so easy for “fake news” to spread
contagiously, it’s vital that real, cutting-edge science is communicated just
as effectively, to just as many people.
For people to believe in science, correct science, and for research
to truly have an impact, it must be communicated. That’s where people like me
come in. That’s where this blog comes in. Welcome.
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