Anonymous wrote:VT has active paleontology research going on.
https://www.paleo.geos.vt.edu/
They also have a lot in neuroscience. As another thread noted, neuroscience is popular these days.
Anonymous wrote:My female cousin is an archeologist with extensive field work experience in the U.S. and abroad, and has never personally experienced anything like that and says her female colleagues are similar. It can happen, but very rarely.
If your DD really wants to be a paleontologist, I wouldn’t let fear of assault be a reason not to. Honestly, campus assaults of female students are probably at least as common if not more so, if only because it’s a much larger population. Get her some self-defense training and encourage her to pick her career aspirations based on what she actually enjoys doing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My female cousin is an archeologist with extensive field work experience in the U.S. and abroad, and has never personally experienced anything like that and says her female colleagues are similar. It can happen, but very rarely.
If your DD really wants to be a paleontologist, I wouldn’t let fear of assault be a reason not to. Honestly, campus assaults of female students are probably at least as common if not more so, if only because it’s a much larger population. Get her some self-defense training and encourage her to pick her career aspirations based on what she actually enjoys doing.
I am an archeologist and this has not been an issue on any projects I've worked on. There is one female archeologist I know who was sexually harassed at work...by her boss, indoors, not in the field. Not denying that assault happens, but it's definitely not so common that I'd steer a young woman away from fieldwork to avoid it.
Also consider that there's a difference between needing to get some field experience as a basic qualification or graduation requirement, and devoting your career to field research. I think all these people saying she will have to do fieldwork at some point are missing the point that doing a little isn't the same as doing it forever. I haven't done fieldwork in years myself with the direction my career has taken (although I'm not against it either).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:However, she’s expressed that for Paleontology she has no desire to work in the field nor at a museum.
She is completing Sophomore year as an average student solidly A’s and B’s. PSAT Test scores are median level, 50th percentile.
What would you encourage her to explore? Where?
We’re Virginia residents.
Go to the best Virginia school she can get into. She won’t get the top three with those scores or grades but might get JMU. CNU, Mary Washington, others. Major does not matter. She can look in the anthropology department for paleo classes or biology department for neurology courses.
Anonymous wrote:My female cousin is an archeologist with extensive field work experience in the U.S. and abroad, and has never personally experienced anything like that and says her female colleagues are similar. It can happen, but very rarely.
If your DD really wants to be a paleontologist, I wouldn’t let fear of assault be a reason not to. Honestly, campus assaults of female students are probably at least as common if not more so, if only because it’s a much larger population. Get her some self-defense training and encourage her to pick her career aspirations based on what she actually enjoys doing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, why is she against fieldwork? Agree she'd need to do some of it in undergrad/grad school at least if she goes the paleontology route.
Op here. She has expressed that in her reading and speaking to her current teachers on fieldwork, she’s learned about the experiences with rape and sexual assault that female Paleontologists have dealt with when working in the field and does not feel comfortable with the settings or how commonly this has occurred.
For the museum aspect, she had a reason that I do not recall.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, why is she against fieldwork? Agree she'd need to do some of it in undergrad/grad school at least if she goes the paleontology route.
Op here. She has expressed that in her reading and speaking to her current teachers on fieldwork, she’s learned about the experiences with rape and sexual assault that female Paleontologists have dealt with when working in the field and does not feel comfortable with the settings or how commonly this has occurred.
For the museum aspect, she had a reason that I do not recall.