Nobel Prize Event Highlights Student Researchers
A sold-out crowd packed Queen’s University’s Isabel Bader Centre for the Performing Arts on Sept. 25 for the rare opportunity to hear two Nobel Laureates discuss their roads to research success, together with Canada’s Chief Science Officer Mona Nemer, and award-winning journalist and author André Picard.
Nobel Laureate Martin Chalfie, who was awarded the prize for chemistry in 2008, visited Queen’s as part of the first-ever Canadian tour of the Nobel Prize Inspiration Initiative (NPII). Organized by Nobel Media, in partnership with biopharmaceutical firm AstraZeneca, the NPII is an international outreach program striving to connect Nobel Laureates with scientific and student communities at universities and research centres worldwide.
“We are honoured to host the Nobel Inspiration Initiative and I’m excited to know that among our live audience and viewers online, we have potential future Nobel Prize Laureates who will be responsible for discoveries that make our world a better place,” says Patrick Deane, Queen’s Principal and Vice-Chancellor, during his opening remarks. “At Queen’s, we believe in the fundamental value of research and want to create an environment where researchers can push boundaries, test limits, fail safely, and take risks to achieve the kind of success talked about here today.”
Mr. Picard moderated the engaging and often humorous 90-minute dialogue, which touched on the guests’ own research journeys, and topics ranging from basic research, gender imbalance in science fields, commercialization, and public trust in scientists. Richard Reznick, Dean of the Queen’s Faculty of Health Sciences, first introduced Mr. Picard and Dr. Chalfie, who spoke one-on-one before Dr. Nemer and Queen’s own Nobel Laureate, Arthur B. McDonald, joined in for expanded discussion and an audience Q&A session.
“The Nobel Prize doesn’t necessarily go to the smartest scientist or the most productive, or the one with the biggest group or most published papers. It goes, in my opinion, to scientists who do things that change the way we do science or we think about the world,” says Dr. Chalfie. “Furthermore, most people don’t sit up at night thinking ‘How am I going to win a prize?’ The reward for many of us is in the discovery.”
Dr. McDonald adds: “The Nobel Prize is the icing on the cake. The real victory is in the breakthrough.”
The panelists spoke at length about the formative years of their careers, discussing early obstacles. Dr. Chalfie brought up an early-career project that did not work out and drove him to abandon the field temporarily, which stood in contrast to part of the NPII public event’s title, Failure, persistence and joy: finding the right balance for research success.
“I was very fortunate to get back into it,” he says. “When I experienced this early disappointment … I didn’t feel I should ask people for help. I didn’t have people telling me that the first time you do things, you’re going to fail. Persistence has to be coupled with mentorship and support.”
As part of the day-long NPII event, Dr. Chalfie sat with some of Queen’s most promising graduate and post-doctoral students, and early-career researchers, prior to the public dialogue for an exclusive roundtable discussion about success and failure at the research frontier. He also toured two cutting-edge, multi-disciplinary research and learning spaces on campus — the Beaty Water Research Centre and Ingenuity Labs at newly-opened Mitchell Hall — meeting with graduate and post-doctoral students, staff, and faculty.
During the public conversation, Mr. Picard posed the issue of the gender gap in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics fields to the panelists for their comments.
“I’m uplifted when I look at the audience today and see so many young people,” says Dr. Nemer. “I’m looking at the many women in the audience and I want you all to know there is a place for you in these fields. Don’t let anyone stop you.”
Dr. McDonald agreed, stating that his field — physics — “needs a revolution of women in the discipline.” He also urged current students to try a variety of things while in university to discover where their passions may lie.
“Science is fun. It’s an adventure,” he says. “Embrace it!”
The event coincides with the launch of a brand new website highlighting Queen’s University’s vast complement of research pursuits and achievements. The site tells the stories behind research happening right here at Queen’s and highlights how research affects our lives and helps to shape our collective knowledge about the world.
For those who could not be among those present at the event, or among over 2,000 viewers who joined our live online broadcast, a video recording of the event is now online. A captioned version of the video will be available in the coming days.