student lab coat
student lab coat

What do teachers want?
I've been looking at this site for ideas about Teacher Appreciation Day 2008 (it's on May 6th!)
http//www.teacher-appreciation.info/
and have found some really nice ideas about how to show gratitude to a teacher on this special day (one of my favourites, being a chemistry student, is designing a special lab coat for a science teacher!).
Was just wondering, from the horse's mouth so to speak (that's you teachers!) - what other ideas are there to make the day special for a teacher?
a well mannered student who is good in studies.
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Lab Coats and Psychology Students?
I am an undergrad psychology student and the top tier classes are the psychology labs, where you concocted little experiments like issuing questioners or observing people doing things. While the students are observing and whatnot they are made to wear lab coats. Why? Would would the purpose of that be? Aren't lab coats meant to keep things clean and sterile? What use would a psychology student have for such a thing?
There could be a number of reasons, but I’m sure you learned about controls in experiments. I think that’s the biggest reason since they can generally wear whatever they want underneath. One test administrator wearing jeans and a T-shirt could potentially gain a different response from a test subject than another wearing a dress shirt and tie. Also, it may be used to establish authority in terms of who to take direction from or ask questions during the lab. There is also the other affect of putting the college aged students into a more professional frame of mind and making them more inclined to behave themselves. Another thing is that it may teach them to leave their work behind when they go home for the night. Some counselors really care about their patients/clients and take their work home only to be depressed when their patients/clients don’t respond to treatment. It could be an attempt to develop habits of keeping things professional rather than letting them get personal.




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How weird: just the other day I was thinking about how scientists are portrayed in film and ran across this:
He looks at how grad students are portrayed in film and describes three categories:
- grad student as a lab rat (slave to his adviser's research)
- grad student as a loner
- grad student as team member (think the OU students in “Twister”)
Last semester my labmates and I saw a midnight showing of “Re-Animator” and we all thought the main characters were much closer to grad students (albeit creepy, creepy grad students) than med students. They were question-driven, after all.
entirely true. What if you require several working places (e.g. a student's lab) to have a scope each and have no money? The costs for this baby are close to nil and an old tv-set can be found in everybodys attic for free.If you look at you'll see lot's of interesting stuff abt. neurobiology and there you don't have to deal with frequencies above 2 kHz AFAIK.
I held a federal workstudy position almost the entire time I was there. I use the campus director as a professional reference. I was put in charge of managing the student lab because it was completely unusable without an OS on every computer. I learned Altiris Deployment Solutions in about a week and had it deploying XP twice daily in no time.
I saw my Acupuncturist for the first time, and at first didn't notice she was preggers (she was wearing a black knit dress under her lab coat) when she mentioned it I made sure to look b/c of SP. She looked like she swallowed a watermelon! Just like a couple of the petite women's pics you posted. You will notice SP looks padded, all over.What a joke she is!
I keep picturing Ann as the Bionic Woman, in a laboratory, balancing a Hyundai on her pinky.
George Michael is wearing oversized glasses and a lab coat with a pocket protector, holding a clipboard. Michael is standing beside him, also wearing a white lab coat, but his hair is all mad-scientist spiky, like Pepper Brooks.
George Michael: “She's the most technologically advanced woman in the universe.”
Michael: “Her?”
PINK LAB COAT IS BACK IN ACTION LOL
I was recently just fitted at a department store by a woman in lab coat with a nametag that said “certified bra fitter” or some other nonsense. I mean, I don't doubt her ability to read a tape measure. And I don't doubt that it's hard to get your own measurements, especially in this area of your body. But really? A lab coat? I had no idea it was so scientific. Is she worried she'll get breasts on her clothes, thus the need to cover them?And I also thought I was a C cup but am actually a D. Ouch. Looks like the lady in the lab coat was right. Because the three bras I bought from her all fit perfectly.]]>