• Question: What would you do with £500

    Asked by anon-208950 to Stuart, Tori, Titus, Hannah, Gill, Alessandro on 5 Mar 2019. This question was also asked by anon-208360, anon-208639, anon-208655, anon-208898, anon-210395, anon-210574, anon-208304, anon-208532, anon-208436.
    • Photo: Hannah Dalgleish

      Hannah Dalgleish answered on 5 Mar 2019:


      I’d like to donate it to the Ada Comic, designed for getting kids excited about science. With the money they’ll be able to send the comics out to more schools in the UK.
      http://www.adacomic.uk/about/

    • Photo: Titus Mutwiri

      Titus Mutwiri answered on 5 Mar 2019:


      This money would help me initiate mentorship programs for STEM among school going students so as to help demystify science, Technology Engineering and Math and make the courses more embraceable by School going student. I participate in an almost similar program for university students through http://www.kamilimu.org so I would customize it to fit younger students.

    • Photo: Gill Harrison

      Gill Harrison answered on 6 Mar 2019:


      I’d have a competition amongst members of the Society and College of Radiographers – possibly students or newly qualified radiographers working in a team to come up with the best way to spend the money in a fun & informative way, to help young people learn more about the role of radiographers in health care. The winning group would then get the £500 to spend on that project…but nothing comes free, so I would expect them to produce an artefact (article, poster, blog, song…or something) to show the rest of the profession what they’ve done [hopefully that would encourage more allied health professionals to join in I’m a scientist and share their knowledge with you and also learn more about science from the other scientists].

    • Photo: Stuart Higgins

      Stuart Higgins answered on 8 Mar 2019:


      I’d use it to bring a team of scientists to different supermarkets around the country and run a stand that let people try out doing their own science experiments, and to give people a chance to talk to scientists in real life.

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