Background
Jeanne McDermott was born in 1955 in Evanston, Illinois, United States; the daughter of Robert McDermott and Julia Wood McDermott.
1978
893 West St, Amherst, MA 01002, United States
Jeanne McDermott studied at Hampshire College, where she received a Bachelor of Arts degree.
2000
419 Boston Ave, Medford, MA 02155, United States
Jeanne McDermott attended Tufts University, where she earned a Master of Arts degree in Teaching.
2018
Jeanne McDermott with her colleagues
(This work argues, that the superpowers are using genetic ...)
This work argues, that the superpowers are using genetic engineering to develop new biological weapons, discuss the dangers of such research and assess the strength of current agreements not to produce biological weapons.
https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0877958963/ref=dbs_a_def_rwt_bibl_vppi_i1
1987
Jeanne McDermott was born in 1955 in Evanston, Illinois, United States; the daughter of Robert McDermott and Julia Wood McDermott.
Jeanne McDermott studied at Hampshire College, where she received a Bachelor of Arts degree in 1978. Also, she attended Tufts University, where she earned a Master of Arts degree in Teaching in 2000.
Jeanne McDermott began her career as a science journalist and book author in 1980. She wrote two books - The Killing Winds: The Menace of Biological Warfare, published in 1987, and Babyface: A Story of Heart and Bones, that came out in 2000. These two works are polar opposites in the subject matter. The Killing Winds deals with the subject of biological and chemical warfare, a subject of riveting importance in the early twenty-first century. Her second book deals with a much different subject - motherhood. Also, Jeanne is a contributor of articles to dozens of publications, including Smithsonian, Popular Science, Horticulture, Wall Street Journal and Geo.
In addition, since 1998, Jeanne has served as a science teacher at a private elementary school - Shady Hill School in Cambridge.
(This work argues, that the superpowers are using genetic ...)
1987(The mother of a child, born with Apert syndrome, recounts...)
2000Quotations: "They laughed good-humoredly, mocking the sense of placelessness, that comes, when a child's development is not sheltered under the great umbrella of the bell curve. In the big world and even in this little red schoolhouse, Nathaniel was not an average kid, but an outlier, at the map's edge, where ships fall off the flat Earth and dragons roam. Suddenly I wished for a child with Down syndrome so he would not be peerless, in a class by himself."
Jeanne McDermott is married to Ted Finch. They have two children.