-
0
-
Mark Ritchie answered on 27 Apr 2016:
First of all, I love discovering new things, like when my team recently found out that grasses in Africa sometimes provide a home for large numbers of nitrogen fixing bacteria just like plants in the bean family.
However, a close second is when I get to watch that “aha” moment when a student “gets” a new, complex idea or discovers something great about their potential
-
-
Alexander Taylor answered on 27 Apr 2016:
I find teaching to be the most satisfying part of my job. Seeing that “aha” moment that Mark talks about, when something really clicks for a students, is very humbling and gratifying. I also love talking with students, understanding how they see the world, and hearing their perspectives on the information they’re learning. A lot of the time they teach me new ways to see the things I’m teaching them!
-
Clay Robinson answered on 4 May 2016:
Favorite part?
Sharing the excitement of new things with other people. I enjoy taking students on trips to see things they never saw or even imagined before. When I would take college students on trips to other states to study soils, there would always be at least one student who, like Sam said to Frodo in the movie of JRR Tolkien’s “Fellowship of the Ring” would say, “If I take one more step, it’ll be the farthest away from home that I’ve ever been.” One time a student was in 6 states they had never before visited, and saw things in soils and crop production they had never seen before.
Most interesting?
The variability in soils. I have been surprised to find springs flowing out of the top of a hill, 30 m above the landscape all around it. I have seen wetlands (which usually occur on flat lands in the bottom of the landscape) on hillslopes of more than 5%.
Even within a few meters in some places, the soil can completely change. There is also variability from top to bottom as you dig a hole: the color changes, the texture (sand, silt, and clay proportions) may change, the structure (the shape of the clumps as the sand, silt, and clay particles are bound together as aggregates), may change, the chemistry may change, and the list goes on.
Related Questions
Recent Questions
-
What are the pros and cons of your profession?
-
How do you determine how old soil is? Knowing the different interactions it has with time, climate, and living
-
What is your favorite thing about being an environmental scientist?
-
Growing up and today included, do/did you have any pets?
-
how long was the longest worm u have ever found
Recent Comments
-
And the winner is… (1 comment)
-
The first scientist eliminated is… (2 comments)
-
If plastic-eating bacteria were released, how drastic do you think the effect would be? (1 comment)
-
Who is Your Role Model? (2 comments)
-
In order to become an environmental engineer did you get a bachelors degree in engineering? (1 comment)
Comments