276:. While there he massively restructured the School of Chemistry and Molecular Sciences, moving from a department of four scientists to a faculty of 40 in the mid-1970s, including two Nobel Laureates and seven Fellows of the Royal Society. Rather than dividing the department per speciality, each area (organic, inorganic and physical chemistry) intermingled, with researchers encouraged to share work and collaborate. Eaborn also introduced the "degree by thesis" program, in which students would be granted their degree after a thesis and an oral exam rather than traditional written exams; this was successful in attracting "original and self-motivated" who had not completed the conventional education program prior to university.
245:. At the time it was a small department with five members of staff and little money for research, but despite that he published his first academic paper in 1949, based on work he had done at Bangor, and continued to publish research papers, eventually numbering over 500. In 1950 he was made a Lecturer, and in 1954 a Reader as part of Leicester's attempts to gain university status, which required people noted enough to raise its profile. In 1951 he was granted a
233:, and his studies were greatly assisted by the appointment of the noted chemist Ted Hughes in 1943. After graduation, Eaborn continued to work at Bangor under legislation which required graduating scientists to work towards the war effort.
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Eaborn introduced "crash courses", where a subject would be crammed into a period of weeks rather than spread out over a year, and served as the first Dean of the School of
Molecular Sciences until 1968, and from then until 1972 the first
201:. There he introduced unconventional lecture and degree structures, eventually attracting a staff which, by the mid-1970s, included two Nobel Laureates and seven Fellows of the Royal Society. For his work he was himself made a
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and his wife, with the family moving to Wales when he was six months old to find work. He and his sister went to the Holt
Endowed School, the local village school, and from 1934 he studied at
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to study chemistry, intending to become a teacher after graduation. While there he met Joyce Thomas, an
English student, and the two married in 1949. At Bangor, Eaborn obtained
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in 1970, and served on the
Society Council for two terms during the 1970s and 80s. After retiring from active work in 1988, Eaborn died on 22 February 2004 in
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158:(15 March 1923 – 22 February 2004) was a British scientist and academic noted for his work in establishing the
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for
Science. He retired in 1988, and died in his sleep after a long illness on 22 February 2004.
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Smith, J. D. (2005). "Colin Eaborn. 15 March 1923 – 22 February 2004: Elected F.R.S. 1970".
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Eaborn became the first non-American to receive the
Frederick Stanley Kipping Award of the
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In 1961, Eaborn accepted an appointment as one of the first four science professors of
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In 1961 he was appointed as a science professor at the newly created
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Work structuring the Sussex
University, 'Organosillicon Compounds
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Fellowship, which allowed him to spend a year working at the
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Fellowship, which allowed him to spend a year working at the
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and his research group, and in 1960 published the seminal
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School of
Chemistry and Molecular Sciences. Born to a
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Biographical
Memoirs of Fellows of the Royal Society
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434:"Bulletin – Obituaries – 27 February 2004"
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101:Frederick Stanley Kipping Award (1964)
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225:. In 1941 he took up a place at
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370:Smith, David (12 March 2004).
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243:University College, Leicester
176:University College, Leicester
137:University College, Leicester
500:Fellows of the Royal Society
103:Organometallic Award (1974)
485:Alumni of Bangor University
304:Fellow of the Royal Society
203:Fellow of the Royal Society
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288:Recognition and other work
178:in 1947. In 1951 he won a
372:"Obituary – Colin Eaborn"
294:American Chemical Society
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402:"Professor Colin Eaborn"
267:Organosillicon Compounds
123:organometallic chemistry
259:United States Air Force
192:Organosilicon Compounds
107:Main Group Award (1988)
352:10.1098/rsbm.2005.0007
223:Ruabon Grammar School
217:Eaborn was born to a
105:Ingold Award (1976)
282:Pro-vice-chancellor
231:First Class Honours
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247:Rotary Foundation
227:Bangor University
199:Sussex University
180:Rotary Foundation
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133:Bangor University
113:Scientific career
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41:15 March 1923
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446:. Retrieved
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412:the original
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381:. Retrieved
377:The Guardian
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153:Colin Eaborn
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129:Institutions
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57:(2004-02-22)
25:Colin Eaborn
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475:2004 deaths
470:1923 births
448:10 December
418:10 December
383:10 December
346:: 101–105.
70:Nationality
464:Categories
314:References
213:Early life
37:1923-03-15
207:Brighton
63:Brighton
73:British
45:Chester
219:joiner
164:joiner
119:Fields
98:Awards
253:with
186:with
450:2009
420:2009
385:2009
263:Army
261:and
52:Died
31:Born
348:doi
156:FRS
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