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88 posts in Tide Bite

Tide Bite – November 2023

This month we have a nice description of FHL’s REU program, of which we are very proud!  We love the way this mentored-research program blends our missions of research and education, and also links undergraduate education with preparing students for graduate school.  

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Tide Bite – October 2023

Greetings,

Summer researchers at FHL carry with them a sense of purpose and urgency: in the time they are here (it’s never long enough), they are focused on gathering data to address a conceived scientific question.  

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Tide Bite – September 2023

As a very busy FHL summer wraps up, it’s fun to read this essay about one research scientist’s many summers at FHL, from lab neurobiologist staying in “primitive” huts, to Whiteley scholar housed in those elegant cabins.  

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Tide Bite – June 2023

Often, scientific advances are made when new methods are used to tackle old problems, like using modern genomics methods to study cancers.  This essay by Allie Tissot takes the opposite approach, using old methods (tried and true larval culturing techniques) to study new problems: impacts of modern aquatic contaminants on organisms.  

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Tide Bite – May 2023

This Tide Bite is a bit different from most, in focusing less on a student or researcher’s work at FHL and more on how the ‘convening power’ of FHL can lead to wonderful brainstorming opportunities.  

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Tide Bite – April 2023

FHL Fundraising: Past and Future
by Megan Dethier (with shared details from Rachel Anderson)
This Tide Bite celebrates our fundraising teams over the decades and honors the retirement of an amazing staff member, our Associate Director for Advancement, Rachel Anderson.   

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Tide Bite – February 2023

People often tell us that spending a quarter or a summer at Friday Harbor Labs as a student or intern was “life changing” or “transformative” for them.  Not uncommonly students who plan to head for a different career such as medical school come to FHL, find a new passion, and decide to study some facet of marine science instead.  

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