Talk:Rabia Salihu Sa'id

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From Opabinia regalis:

  • She's been profiled in mainstream news sources about science, like this Nature News piece, checkY
  • and also in Nigerian sources, like this one. checkY
  • She's also a fellow of the African Scientific Institute, although I'm uncertain of their selectivity.  Done - added info to the article
  • And while none of these are substantive coverage alone, they're evidence she's obviously active in advocacy and public outreach [1], checkY
  • [2], checkY, by the author, put it in further reading
  • [3],  Done - added info to the article
  • [4].  Done - added info to the article
  • She's published more than a single paper, though mostly in Nigerian journals (her CV is here). — chock full of details for researching sources, helps clarify the length of her career
  • She also seems to be putting some of her professional effort into her outreach work, e.g. [5],  Done - added info to the article
  • [6]. — interesting article, but written by Sa'id so not a good source from that perspective

From Joe Roe:

  • Significant coverage by the BBC (which whatever its involvement with this article is still a very reliable source)
  • [7] checkY
  • [8], checkY
  • NPR [9], checkY
  • Nature [10], checkY
  • Elsevier [11] checkY
  • Yahoo News [12] stand out in particular. -- checkY, but another version, not yahoo news

From Espresso Addict

  • She has gained substantial press coverage, some of which is reasonably detailed eg this article in Nature.checkY

From Agricola44

From Carcharoth

  • She has also received ongoing publicity since, such as this.checkY

--Not sure I have them all, and I think some are dupes, but have a start.--CaroleHenson (talk) 05:39, 14 December 2016 (UTC)[reply]

Checked off items already used in the article with a plain checkY and  Done if added to the article.--CaroleHenson (talk) 21:19, 14 December 2016 (UTC)[reply]

Additional sources

Right now, I am looking to get meatier content about her academic and research career (especially between the 1990s and today), but here are some additional sources that may be useful. By the way, her surname is also spelled Said, Sai'id and Saeed and she uses "RS" instead of "Rabia Salihu" in the byline of some journal articles.

  • Tulshyan, Ruchika (19 February 2015). "The Number 1 Reason Women Don't Get Promoted At Work". Forbes. 100% of the women interviewed reported gender bias. Black women are more likely than other women to report having to prove themselves over and over again. Both Latinas and Black women scientists report regularly being mistaken as janitors. + Sa'id states, Women make up only about 14% of Nigerian academics but account for about a quarter of the science and technology professor. — This is in regards to the STEM outreach and mentoring that Sa'id does to encourage women to explore careers in the sciences, specifically physics.
  • "Women on the 'Problem with Science'". BBC. Comment: Transcript embedded in xml code, but in blocks so it's easy to read here. Minor mention, but in the greater context, particularly for low-income people. {{cite news}}: External link in |quote= (help)

--CaroleHenson (talk) 22:33, 14 December 2016 (UTC)[reply]

Elsevier award