Susan Keatley
Science Fare
Welcome to Science Fare! In this show, scientist and writer Susan Keatley talks with scientists about their latest research, and draws connections between the research and high school science learning standards. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Episodes
Carla Guarraia on Integrating Research into High School Science Teaching 25.05.2026 50:31
Science teacher extraordinaire Carla Guarraia,who teaches at The Park School of Baltimore and is also the chair of the Upper School Science Department, tells us about her path to pursuing science and then science teaching, the way she integrates research into her teaching, and gives advice to students interested in pursuing science. Resources mentioned in this episode: Carla’s Park School fa...
Plastics Research in High School with Carla Guarraia 18.05.2026 4:19
In this mini episode, we hear from science teacher extraordinaire Carla Guarraia who teaches at The Park School of Baltimore and is also the chair of the Upper School Science Department. Carla tells us about an innovative plastics class she teaches that challenges students’ views on plastics and gets them involved in research on plastics. Tune in next week for the full-length interview and t...
Seán Jordan on the Search for the Origins of Life 11.05.2026 46:18
Astrobiologist Sean Jordan (Dublin City University) talks about his path to becoming a scientist studying the origins of life, some of big questions scientists grapple with when looking for chemical and biological signs of early life, and his advice for students interested in astrobiology. Find Sean at The Protosigns Lab and on instagram at @originssean and @protosigns Listeners, please clic...
The First Cell Membranes with Sean Jordan 04.05.2026 3:59
In this mini episode, astrobiologist Sean Jordan (Dublin City University) talks about his lab’s work on lipids and the origins of cell membranes. While the earliest cell membranes, aka protocell membranes, were quite different from the cell membranes of today, they also share some important biochemical similarities. Please click below to fill out the survey for this episode: Science Fare Pod...
Ayyana Chakravartula and Catherine Sheane on Careers in Engineering 27.04.2026 49:05
Please click below to fill out the survey for this episode: Science Fare Podcast Feedback Form Science Fare Podcast website Our guests today are engineers Ayyana Chakravartula and Catherine (Cat) Sheane. Ayyana is the Failure Analysis and Strategy Lead for the Devices & Services organization at Google. She leads a team of science-y detectives who work to understand why things...
High School Chemistry in Engineering: Microstructure with Ayyana Chakravartula and Corrosion with Cat Sheane 20.04.2026 3:58
Please click below to fill out the survey for this episode: Science Fare Podcast Feedback Form Science Fare Podcast website Our guests today are engineers Ayyana Chakravartula and Catherine (Cat) Sheane. Ayyana is the Failure Analysis and Strategy Lead for the Devices & Services organization at Google. She leads a team of science-y detectives who work to understand why things...
Stacey Smith on Flower Color Evolution and Life as a Botanist 13.04.2026 1:02:43
Please click below to fill out the survey for this episode: Science Fare Podcast Feedback Form Science Fare Podcast website Online resources mentioned in this episode: Stacey’s flower petal image on the Howard Hughes Medical Institute Biointeractive site Stacey’s essay, With Bated Breath Stacey’s lab website Scientific American article, “DNA Studies Uncover Unexpected Evol...
Why is Flower Color Important Ecologically? With Stacey Smith 06.04.2026 4:11
Please click below to fill out the survey for this episode: Science Fare Podcast Feedback Form Science Fare Podcast website Our guest today Stacey Smith. Stacey is an associate professor in the Ecology and Evolutionary Biology department at the University of Colorado in Boulder. Her lab studies the evolution and genetics of flowers with a focus on the tomato family. Recent work in her lab h...
David C. Schwartz on the Beginnings of Genomics and What the Future Holds 30.03.2026 43:53
Please click below to fill out the survey for this episode: Science Fare Podcast Feedback Form Science Fare Podcast website Our guest today is David Schwartz, who is a genomic scientist and emeritus professor of chemistry and genetics at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. Dave received his Ph. D. from Columbia University in 1985 and he invented an important method for separating large DNA...
Meiosis at the Level of Single DNA Molecule with David Schwartz 23.03.2026 3:40
Please click below to fill out the survey for this episode: Science Fare Podcast Feedback Form Science Fare Podcast website In this mini episode, host Susan Keatley gives an overview of what happens in meiosis and genomic scientist David Schwartz talks about how genomics enabled biologists to make discoveries through, in part, visualizing single DNA molecules. Schwartz connects the ability...
Jan Drgona on Solving Problems with Energy Sustainability in Buildings Using Scientific Machine Learning and Engineering 16.03.2026 47:23
Please click below to fill out the survey for this episode: Science Fare Podcast Feedback Form And, check out the Science Fare Podcast website ! Our guest today is Jan Drgona, who joins us today from Johns Hopkins University. Jan is an associate professor in the department of civil and systems engineering, and is also at the Ralph S O’Connor Sustainable Energy Institute. In this...
Physics and Machine Learning in Building Temperature Control with Jan Drgona 09.03.2026 3:24
Please click below to fill out the survey for this episode: Science Fare Podcast Feedback Form Science Fare Podcast website Our guest today is Jan Drgona, who joins us today from Johns Hopkins University. Jan is an associate professor in the department of civil and systems engineering, and is also at the Ralph S O’Connor Sustainable Energy Institute. Jan’s research focuses on en...
Tris Hann on How Police Use Physics to Investigate Motor Vehicle Crashes 02.03.2026 40:52
Please click below to fill out the survey for this episode: Science Fare Podcast Feedback Form And, check out the Science Fare Podcast website ! In this full-length interview, Baltimore City police officer and education doctorate holder Tris Hann talks about his background in math education and explains how physics is used to investigate motor vehicle crashes. Highlights of the episode: *Sus...
Yes, You'll Need to Know This One Day: Police Use Physics to Investigate Motor Vehicle Crashes 23.02.2026 8:22
Our guest today is Tris Hann, and we are doing something new on this episode — Tris is not actually a scientist, but, he is a Baltimore City police officer! The reason he is on the show is because police officers use physics to investigate vehicle crashes, and that is what Tris is going to talk to us about today. Highlights of this mini episode: *Susan introduces the Science Fare p...
Elizabeth Catania on Neuroscience, Becoming a Scientist, and Linking the Humanities and Science 16.02.2026 44:03
Please click below to fill out the survey for this episode: Science Fare Podcast Feedback Form And, check out the Science Fare Podcast website ! Dr. Elizabeth Catania is a neuroscience researcher, assistant professor, Director of Undergraduate Studies and Director of Independent Studies at Vanderbilt University. In this episode, guest host Lucy Pohl, who is the high school intern for the pod...
The Nervous System, Women in Science, and Advances in Neuroscience with Elizabeth Catania 09.02.2026 14:16
Please click below to fill out the survey for this episode: Science Fare Podcast Feedback Form Science Fare Podcast website Dr. Elizabeth Catania is a neuroscience researcher, assistant professor, Director of Undergraduate Studies and Director of Independent Studies at Vanderbilt University. Dr. Catania earned her BA in Neuroscience from the University of Delaware, where she originally star...
Welcome to Science Fare Season Four 02.02.2026 1:42
Welcome to Science Fare, Season 4! Episodes every Monday, Feb - May 2026. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Re-Release: Pat Brown on DNA Mutations and Cancer, Leukemia, and Targeted Cancer Therapy 01.01.2026 1:07:40
Pat Brown talks about his path to becoming a physician and scientist, the importance of a bench-to-bedside- back -to-bench approach in drug development, and targeted cancer therapy. Using his work in leukemia as an example, Pat talks about how changes at the level of DNA sequence change proteins and can lead to the development of cancer, and how scientists can use this knowledge to develop specifi...
DNA Mutations and Cancer with Pat Brown 29.12.2025 13:00
Pat Brown is a Senior Clinical Trial Physician in Hematology Clinical Development at the pharmaceutical company Bristol Myers Squibb. (For listeners who aren't familiar with the word hematology, it means the study of blood and blood disorders.) Pat earned a bachelor’s degree in engineering from the United States Military Academy in West Point, NY, and a master’s degree in philosophy and politics f...
Sam and Meg Lubner on Careers in Cancer Care, How Oncologists and Radiologists Can Best Communicate, and How AI is Helping in Cancer Diagnosis and Treatment 18.12.2025 1:08:50
Please click below to fill out the survey for this episode: Science Fare Podcast Feedback Form Our guests today are Sam and Meg Lubner. They are cancer doctors, and they are married! Sam is a hematologist and oncologist at University of Wisconsin Health, and an associate professor at the University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health. Meg is a professor of radiology at the University...
The Basic Science Behind Imaging (Radiation) and Targeted Cancer Therapy (DNA Mutations) in Cancer Care with Sam and Meg Lubner 15.12.2025 14:56
Please click below to fill out the survey for this episode: Science Fare Podcast Feedback Form Our guests today are Sam and Meg Lubner. They are cancer doctors, and they are married! Sam is a hematologist and oncologist at University of Wisconsin Health, and an associate professor at the University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health where he directs the Hematology and Medical Oncolo...
Kelly Knudson on How Chemistry Helps Archaeologists Learn about People in the Past 04.12.2025 45:14
Please click below to fill out the survey for this episode: Science Fare Podcast Feedback Form Our guest today is Kelly Knudson. This episode is an edited version of an episode released during Season One of the podcast. Kelly is a professor of Anthropology in the School of Human Evolution and Social Change at Arizona State University, and director of the Center for Bioarchaeological Research...
Isotopes and Atomic Radius in Archaeology with Kelly Knudson 01.12.2025 13:49
Please click below to fill out the survey for this episode: Science Fare Podcast Feedback Form Our guest today is Kelly Knudson. This episode is an edited version of an episode released during Season One of the podcast. Kelly is a professor of Anthropology in the School of Human Evolution and Social Change at Arizona State University, and director of the Center for Bioarchaeological Research...
Richard Edden on Hunting for GABA by Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy of the Brain 20.11.2025 1:23:53
Please click below to fill out the survey for this episode: Science Fare Podcast Feedback Form Our guest today is Richard Edden Richard is a professor in the department of Neuroradiology at Johns Hopkins University. He uses a tool — a technology, a method— called Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy (MRS) to study the brain. Richard’s group focuses on both method development — how can they...
Electronegativity and Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy with Richard Edden MINI Episode 17.11.2025 14:35
Please click below to fill out the survey for this episode: Science Fare Podcast Feedback Form Our guest today is Richard Edden. Richard is a professor in the department of Neuroradiology at Johns Hopkins University. He uses a tool — a technology, a method— called Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy (MRS) to study the brain. Richard’s group focuses on both method development — how can they...
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