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Toxicologist

Real-Life Activities

Real-Life Communication

As with many professions where there are ethics involved, toxicologists belong to professional societies. These are groups of people in the field who may share ideas, pool resources and solve problems.

You've been asked to explain the five main goals of the Basil County Toxicologists' Society to a Grade 2 class. It's Job Week and the children are trying to find out what they want to be when they grow up.

Here are the five goals:

  1. To release information concerning health and public safety in a truthful and timely fashion, always in the belief that the available data and research is both credible and important
  2. To always practice the highest standards of occupational health and safety for the benefit of our co-workers
  3. To heed all laws, regulations and ethical standards as they pertain to the general welfare of human beings and animals involved in experiments
  4. To conduct our work and ourselves objectively and in a professional manner
  5. To avoid situations where there is a conflict of interest, where our professional judgments are impaired by a clear conflict of interest

"In this field, communicating in a clear and direct way is important," says toxicologist Alan Barbour. "I've had to learn how to engage a jury and convey very technical information in an understandable fashion."

Make the five goals understandable to a bunch of seven-year-old kids.