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46 - Reflections on a Career with the Field Studies Council

from Part II - Essays: Inspiring Fieldwork

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  11 February 2020

Tim Burt
Affiliation:
Durham University
Des Thompson
Affiliation:
Scottish Natural Heritage
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Summary

I was an average student in everything except geography, where I seemed to excel at understanding landforms and developed a thirst for knowledge and a joy of a developing vocabulary. Who wouldn’t want to know about castellated ramparts, subduction zones and podsolisation! I struggled with science but felt it was so important to develop and test hypotheses – and biology field studies were a small but joyful part of my school career. I am an English West Country girl and delighted in coastal habitats; on the coast at Studland I identified my first grass – Townsend’s Cord grass – of course! To my shame, at that stage in my career, I didn’t understand the ethos and discipline of making biological records and I note that this discipline remains absent from our school curricula.

Type
Chapter
Information
Curious about Nature
A Passion for Fieldwork
, pp. 331 - 340
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2020

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References

Berry, R. J. and Crothers, J. (1987). Nature, Natural History and Ecology. Linnean Society/Academic Press for the Field Studies Council, London. Reprinted from Biological Journal of the Linnean Society 32.Google Scholar
CIEEM (2011). Ecological Skills: Shaping the Professional for the 21st Century. See https://cieem.net/resource/closing-the-gap-rebuilding-ecological-skills-in-the-21st-century-ieem-2011/ (accessed July 2019).Google Scholar

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