Department of Chemistry

Climate & Diversity

Increasing access

Broadening opportunities

Promoting inclusivity

climate and diversity
Climate and Diversity Committee

The Climate and Diversity committee's goal is to create a supportive and welcoming environment within the Department of Chemistry.

Scientists work together at computer

Department Guides work to facilitate communication between conflicting parties and refer people to a variety of resources for further assistance.

Department Guides

 

Chemists with Disabilities 

Joseph Priestley, the chemist who discovered oxygen, had a speech impediment. William H. Wollaston, who discovered rhodium and palladium, was visually impaired. And Sir John W. Gornforth, who received the 1975 Nobel Prize in Chemistry for his work on the stereochemistry of enzymatic processes, was deaf. (Source: C&EN)

Sir John W. Cornforth, who received the 1975 Nobel Prize in Chemistry for his work on the stereochemistry of enzymatic processes, was deaf. (Source: C&EN)

Albert Einstein lived with dyslexia. He was awarded the Nobel Prize in Physics (1921), the Max Plank Medal (1929), and Time magazine's Person of the Century (1999). Einstein's intellectual achievements and originality have made the word "Einstein" synonymous with "genius." (Source: American Chemical Society, Chemists with Disabilities Committee)

 

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