The Girl Who Spoke Science
Leave a reviewMeet 11-year-old Sarah Galvani-Townsend! She’s our first ever kid science expert. In many ways, Sarah is a regular kid who loves science. But she’s got an unusual hobby. Sarah tells us why studying dogs and rabies is one of her favorite extracurricular activities, and how she translates “science language” into “kid language.”
© Tumble Media | 00:12:45
|
Full episode description
Episode One: The Mystery of the Barton Springs Salamander with Dr. Hayley Gillespie
This is an Episodic show. You can listen to it in any order, but episode one is always a great place to start.Full Episode description
Meet 11-year-old Sarah Galvani-Townsend! She’s our first ever kid science expert. In many ways, Sarah is a regular kid who loves science. But she’s got an unusual hobby. Sarah tells us why studying dogs and rabies is one of her favorite extracurricular activities, and how she translates “science language” into “kid language.”
To read Sarah’s paper and find out more about Science Journal for Kids, visit our blog at sciencepodcastforkids.org/blog. The original paper is called “One Health approach to cost-effective rabies control in India” and the lead author is Meagan C. Fitzpatrick.
Tumble is brought to you with support from KiwiCo. KiwiCo is offering Tumble listeners the chance to try them for free – to redeem this offer & learn more about their projects for kids, visit kiwico.com/tumble
Love Tumble? Support us on Patreon! Go to patreon.com/tumblepodcast and pledge today. Even just a $1/month means a lot to us!
We love hearing from you. Email us your questions, comments and feedback at tumblepodcast@gmail.com.
—
This episode is sponsored by
· Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app
© Tumble Mediabop| Status: Active, 248 episodes | Kind: Episodic | Episode URL
The content, Artwork and advertising within this podcast is not owned or affiliated with Sound Carrot and remain the property of their respective owners.