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An excerpt from the report card of Nobel winner John Gurdon’s report card at age 15. It read that his dreams of becoming a scientist were “ridiculous.” (CNN) ...
LONDON — Teacher knows best? That doesn't appear to be the case for one teacher who called a future Nobel Prize winner's dreams of becoming a scientist "quite ridiculous" in a scathing report card.
In 1949, a teacher at Eton, a British boarding school, belittled John Gurdon's dreams of becoming a scientist as "quite ridiculous." This week, Gurdon's breakthrough in reprogramming cells ...
Despite his teacher’s opinion that he couldn’t learn simple biological facts, John Gurdon managed - in a classical experiment in 1962 - to replace the immature cell nucleus in an egg cell of a ...
Megan Allen is a veteran English teacher who was the 2010 Florida Teacher of the Year and a finalist for National Teacher of the Year. She is also a National Board Certified Teacher.
The Reporter-News obtained a letter sent to parents days before the school head's arrest for allegations of failure to report child abuse.
Gurdon's groundbreaking work in the '60s found that all cells contained the same DNA and contained all the information needed to build any specific tissue.
Gurdon, born in 1933, rose to prominence in 1962 when he took the genetic code from a cell in a frog's intestines and transplanted it inside a frog egg, which developed into a normal tadpole.
The Manatee County Sheriff’s Office is investigating a teacher who is accused of sending an inappropriate letter to one of his 11-year-old students.
That doesn't appear to be the case for one teacher who called a future Nobel Prize winner's dreams of becoming a scientist "quite ridiculous" in a scathing report card. John Gurdon's future ...
The Reporter-News obtained a letter sent to parents days before the school head's arrest for allegations of failure to report child abuse.
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