Sally Le Page is a British evolutionary biologist and science communicator. She is best known for making educational science content on YouTube, both for her own channel and for collaborations with groups such as General Electric and Rooster Teeth. She completed her PhD at the University of Oxford researching sexual selection.

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Sally Le Page
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Born1991 or 1992 (age 32–33)[citation needed]
NationalityBritish
EducationUniversity of Oxford (BA)
University of Oxford (PhD)
Occupations
Known forShed Science on YouTube
YouTube information
Channel
Years active2012–present
GenreScience education
Subscribers87.00 thousand[1]
(June 2021)
Total views2.28 million[1]
(June 2021)
Associated acts

Last updated: 08 Jul 2022
Websitesallylepage.co.uk
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Education

Le Page attended King's High, Warwick.[2] She studied biology at the University of Oxford starting in 2010, and graduated with a first-class Bachelor of Arts degree in 2013.[3]

Research

Le Page completed her PhD at the University of Oxford researching sexual selection.[3] Her research focussed on using Drosophila melanogaster to understand evolutionary theory. She found that if brothers grew up in the same environment as larvae they are less harmful to female fruit flies.[4] Her research was covered in American Association for the Advancement of Science's Eureka Alert and on Oxford Sparks.[5][6]

Public engagement

In 2013 Le Page won The Guardian and Oxford University Press Very Short Film competition.[7][8] She is the science correspondent on Rooster Teeth.[9][10] She won Science Slam in Oxford in 2013.[3] Since 2012, Le Page has created videos for her own science YouTube channel Shed Science, which has over 50,000 subscribers, and where she publishes science videos, vlogs and interviews other science communicators.[11] In 2014 she performed at the Royal Institution.[12] In 2015 she became the General Electric Creator in Residence.[13][14][15] She joined them at South by Southwest, where she discussed the neuroscience of taste.[16] In 2017 she was invited by BNP Paribas Foundation to make a science video studying coral reefs in Polynesia,[17][18] and later in the year criticized UK water suppliers for their use of dowsing to find water.[19][20] Le Page is a campaigner for LGBT equality and queer visibility in STEM.[21][22]

References

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