Speak Simply About Chemistry & Your Job

As a chemist, you understand that chemistry is all around us. As a spokesperson for chemistry, you see opportunities to talk about chemistry all around you, too.

Chat up chemistry.

No matter where you go or who you鈥檙e talking to, you have a chance to improve someone鈥檚 understanding of your profession. Whether at a neighborhood barbeque or a cocktail party, or when discussing current events with a non-scientist, there鈥檚 bound to be an opportunity to shine a positive light on your profession.

Everyday conversations are great opportunities to shape others鈥� perceptions of who chemists are and what chemists do. And there鈥檚 no better spokesperson for chemistry than you!

How can you speak simply about chemistry?

Chemists, "What do you do?"

In everyday conversations 鈥� a neighborhood party, a networking event, a business flight 鈥� you鈥檙e given the opportunity to share something about yourself and your profession and to improve someone鈥檚 appreciation for chemistry.

Don鈥檛 get tied up in the language of research notes, lectures, or your latest progress report. When you鈥檙e talking to a non-scientist about your job, think in broad terms and big pictures. Use real-world examples to illustrate how your role makes a difference.

Who am I talking to?

If you鈥檙e able, use examples that the other person would be familiar with, such as a current event, a connection to their profession, or a link with their community.

Will they understand what I鈥檓 talking about?

It鈥檚 critical to speak in terms that anyone can understand. Avoid using technical terms or, if you have to use them, explain them in simple terms. You may also need to generalize what you do to make it understandable.

Why will they be interested?

People are interested in topics that affect them personally, so show them a connection to their lives. The enthusiasm and pride you show when discussing chemistry will make others more likely to listen, too.

Chemistry conversation starters

Have you ever found yourself hard-pressed to explain your work to someone who doesn鈥檛 understand chemistry?

Write your own conversation starter 鈥� a quick and simple description of your job. Consider it your personal tag line, a 10-second description of your job. Your conversation starter should be short and use terms that anyone can understand. It should be relatable to everyday life and encourage someone to ask questions to find out more about you.

Here are some examples from ACS members:

鈥淚鈥檓 a chemist and I鈥檓 discovering how drugs in our water are affecting the growth of our crops.鈥澨撎�Kyle Butzine

鈥淚鈥檓 a chemist and I help create drugs that help the body protect itself through the immune system.鈥澨撎�Francine Park

鈥淚鈥檓 a chemical engineer and I teach my students how to make new products on a large scale, at the lowest cost, and in the safest way.鈥澨撎�Kal Sharma

"I鈥檓 a chemist and I鈥檓 working to discover drugs to cure brain cancer.鈥澨撎�Zuping Xia

"I鈥檓 a chemist and I teach people how to learn about the atoms and molecules around them.鈥澨撎�Onofrio (Dick) G. Gaglione

Make everyday connections to chemistry

We know that chemistry is a part of our everyday lives, but others may not see the connection. Non-scientists might recognize plastics and gasoline as a product of chemists, but might not see the chemistry that goes into a safe supply of food and water.

You can shed light on these important connections.

When you hear someone marvel at the changes in technology over their lifetime, point out the advances in materials, medicines and other products that are a result of chemical research. If you鈥檙e discussing a news story about the environment, point out the advantages of green chemistry as a way to reduce waste and improve efficiency. Take the time to tell others that chemists are involved in many of today鈥檚 most pressing issues and advances.

Share why you're proud to be a chemist

Chemistry is exciting and meaningful. Chemists work on complex challenges to improve people鈥檚 lives through better medicines, cleaner technologies and safer materials.

How did you choose a career in chemistry? What鈥檚 exciting and interesting about performing research? Did you ever have an 鈥渁h-ha!鈥� moment? Why does chemistry captivate you? Who is the chemist who inspired you ask difficult questions and motivated you to explore the world through science?

鈥淐hemistry is all about new materials, new reactions, new catalysts, new structures. Anything that leads to a dramatic transformation in how we live depends on chemistry to at least some extent.鈥�听鈥撎�George Schatz

鈥淐hemistry is always trying to improve what is already known听and is constantly trying to find new knowledge, new discoveries that improve and transform the quality of life. Through new discoveries and a better understanding of what is affecting our quality of life, including health, the environment and energy, chemists have sought and will continue to produce solutions to all these problems.鈥�听鈥撎�Ingrid Montes, ACS Director-at-large

鈥淚 don鈥檛 know of many disciplines that open up the world听the way chemistry does because it touches everything. I would be hard pressed to think of something where chemistry isn鈥檛 playing a role in the advances that we benefit from today 鈹 from breakthroughs in medicine, to nutrition, to more sustainable energy sources, to personal care products, to biodegradable packaging, and so on.鈥�听鈥撎�Mary Carmen Gasco-Buisson

Vimeo ID: 190613698

Allison Fox, a geochemistry graduate student at Penn State University, attempts to explain her research before Speak Simply training and after. Which version do you think will appeal most to non-scientists?