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BEGIN:VEVENT
UID:4220eace7e63a2ba66eaba0fcd26501f
CATEGORIES:APECS Events
CREATED:20190723T071234
SUMMARY:APECS Webinar: Bias in professional relationships
LOCATION:Online
DESCRIPTION:The webinar will be an airing of a panel that Meghan Helmberger helped orga
 nize with the CIRES (Cooperative Institute for Research in the Environmenta
 l Sciences) graduate association or CGA that she co-chairs at University of
  Colorado Boulder. The panel is 45 minutes long with about 15 minutes of qu
 estions/discussion and that will be followed by a question/answer period/di
 scussion with the APECS community, including two of the original panelists 
 (Kristy Tiampo and Chelsea Thompson).. Date/time: August 8th 8pm GMT.\nAll 
 the panelists who participated on the panel are:\nDr. Susan Sullivan, CIRES
 \nSusan Sullivan is the Director of the Diversity and Inclusion program at 
 CIRES.  Her role includes recruiting a broad talent pool and supporting an 
 inclusive workplace culture at CIRES where all can thrive in their chosen c
 areer path. \nDr. Kristy Tiampo, CIRES\nDr. Kristy Tiampo is the Director o
 f the Earth Science and Observation Center in CIRES and a Professor of Geol
 ogical Sciences at the University of Colorado Boulder. She obtained her PhD
  in Geophysics from the University of Colorado at Boulder, after practicing
  as a construction engineer for the US Army Corps of Engineers for almost 1
 0 years. At EOSC, her focus has expanded to the development of interdiscipl
 inary initiatives into a wider variety of natural hazards and techniques, w
 ith the goal of fostering new remote sensing initiatives with resident and 
 affiliated researchers. \nDr. Hazel Bain, CIRES\nDr. Hazel Bain is a CIRES 
 Research Scientist based at NOAA's Space Weather Prediction Center. She has
  a strong interest in increasing diversity, equity and inclusion in STEM be
 cause she believes that everyone should have the opportunity to be present,
  to be heard, and to be treated fairly. Biases, both explicit and implicit,
  often stand in the way of this. Implicit biases, in particular, are someth
 ing that we all have and need to be aware of in order to reduce their impac
 ts. She recently convened a panel on implicit bias at the AGU Fall meeting 
 in order to connect experts in this field with our scientific community, wi
 th the goal of furthering our communities awareness of implicit bias\nDr. C
 helsea Thompson, Scientific Aviation\nDr. Thompson is an atmospheric chemis
 t who, until recently, was a CIRES researcher in the NOAA Chemical Sciences
  Division. She is an experienced field scientist, having worked at various 
 ground sites including the Alaskan Arctic and the oil and gas fields of Uta
 h, and flown on large-scale airborne missions with NOAA and NASA. Chelsea i
 s now a recovering academic working in business development at Scientific A
 viation, a private airborne measurements company based locally in Boulder.\
 n
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:<p>The webinar&nbsp;will be an airing of a panel that Meghan Helmberger hel
 ped organize with the CIRES (Cooperative Institute for Research in the Envi
 ronmental Sciences) graduate association or CGA that she co-chairs at Unive
 rsity of Colorado Boulder. The panel is 45 minutes long with about 15 minut
 es of questions/discussion and that will be followed by a question/answer p
 eriod/discussion with the APECS community, including two of the original pa
 nelists (Kristy Tiampo and Chelsea Thompson)..&nbsp;Date/time:&nbsp;<strong
 >August 8th 8pm GMT.</strong></p><p>All the panelists who participated on t
 he panel are:</p><p><em>Dr. Susan Sullivan, CIRES</em></p><p>Susan Sullivan
  is the Director of the Diversity and Inclusion program at CIRES.&nbsp; Her
  role includes recruiting a broad talent pool and supporting an inclusive w
 orkplace culture at CIRES where all can thrive in their chosen career path.
 &nbsp;</p><p><em>Dr. Kristy Tiampo, CIRES</em></p><p>Dr. Kristy Tiampo is t
 he Director of the Earth Science and Observation Center in CIRES and a Prof
 essor of Geological Sciences at the University of Colorado Boulder. She obt
 ained her PhD in Geophysics from the University of Colorado at Boulder, aft
 er practicing as a construction engineer for the US Army Corps of Engineers
  for almost 10 years. At EOSC, her focus has expanded to the development of
  interdisciplinary initiatives into a wider variety of natural hazards and 
 techniques, with the goal of fostering new remote sensing initiatives with 
 resident and affiliated researchers.&nbsp;</p><p><em>Dr. Hazel Bain, CIRES<
 /em></p><p>Dr. Hazel Bain is a CIRES Research Scientist based at NOAA's Spa
 ce Weather Prediction Center. She has a strong interest in increasing diver
 sity, equity and inclusion in STEM because she&nbsp;believes that everyone 
 should have the opportunity to be present, to be heard, and to be treated f
 airly. Biases, both explicit and implicit, often stand in the way of this. 
 Implicit biases, in particular, are something that we all have and need to 
 be aware of in order to reduce their impacts. She&nbsp;recently convened a 
 panel on implicit bias at the AGU Fall meeting in order to connect experts 
 in this field with our scientific community, with the goal of furthering ou
 r communities awareness of implicit bias</p><p><em>Dr. Chelsea Thompson,&nb
 sp;Scientific Aviation</em></p><p>Dr. Thompson is an atmospheric chemist wh
 o, until recently, was a CIRES researcher in the NOAA Chemical Sciences Div
 ision. She is an experienced field scientist, having worked at various grou
 nd sites including the Alaskan Arctic and the oil and gas fields of Utah, a
 nd flown on large-scale airborne missions with NOAA and NASA. Chelsea is no
 w a recovering academic working in business development at Scientific Aviat
 ion, a private airborne measurements company based locally in Boulder.</p>
DTSTAMP:20260425T093040Z
DTSTART;TZID=UTC;VALUE=DATE:20190808
DTEND;TZID=UTC;VALUE=DATE:20190809
SEQUENCE:0
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