• Question: What do you like most about your job?

    Asked by herm532hush3 on 1 Oct 2025. This question was also asked by nada532tors, redd535muns6, koan532yard32, james.m23, navy532nays97, TomW, tram532gage25, host532gage25.
    • Photo: Laura Durrant

      Laura Durrant answered on 1 Oct 2025:


      I really like exploring all the new technologies coming out in the field. Genomics is an area of science that’s advancing really fast, so biotechnology companies are inventing lots of new and better ways to sequence the genome.

      You might have heard of the Human Genome Project which ran between 1990 – 2003. It was the fist time that all 46 human chromosomes (known as the genome) were sequenced from end-to-end. It took 13 years to complete between the years 1990 – 2003… fast forward to today, and some modern technologies can do this in just 24 hours! It’s really quite remarkable.

    • Photo: Caroline Roche

      Caroline Roche answered on 15 Oct 2025:


      I like learning about new things, whether that is new process I am working with, new technology that is available or even learning about what all the different scientists and engineers on my projects do.
      Science is such broad subject and career path that there is always something new to learn about or different area to explore.

    • Photo: Martin McCoustra

      Martin McCoustra answered on 20 Jan 2026:


      I’ve always enjoyed finding out new stuff… Discovery can be thrilling but then going on to tell people about it is equally important. You can’t do science without spending time telling people about what you’ve discovered. That’s how we progress scientifically and technically.

    • Photo: Kalina Dimitrova

      Kalina Dimitrova answered on 20 Jan 2026:


      What I like most is making things safe and useful for people.

      As a structural engineer, I get to figure out how buildings and bridges can stand up without falling down. I like solving puzzles: working out how forces like weight, wind, and earthquakes move through a structure and choosing the right shapes and materials to handle them.

      It’s also rewarding to see something that started as lines on paper turn into a real building that people use every day, knowing it’s strong and safe because of the work I did.

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