The Institute of Science and Technology is a UK-based professional organization which is a member of the Science Council and thereby authorized to award the designation Registered Science Technician (RSciTech), Registered Scientist (RSci) and Chartered Scientist (CSci). [1]
Abbreviation | IST |
---|---|
Formation | 1948 (2007) |
Legal status | professional organization |
Purpose | support of management and technical staff in science, technology, engineering, arts, meadia and IT-related employment |
Location |
|
Region served | UK |
Affiliations | Science Council |
Website | istonline.org.uk |
History
editIt was formed in 1948 as the Science Technology Association, became the Institute of Science Technology (IST)in 1954 and took its present name in 2007.[2] The IST was formed specifically for science laboratory technicians,[3] and continues to provide specialist qualifications in this area, up to Higher Diploma[4] but has expanded the membership in line with developments in roles in science and technology.
Notable members
editThe Chairman, Terry Croft, MBE has been recognised in 2014 as one of the 100 UK Leading Practising Scientists.[5]
The President, Dr Helen Sharman, OBE is a chemist who became the first British astronaut and the first woman to visit the Mir space station in 1991. Helen joined the Institute of Science and Technology in 2015 and since has been bringing a wealth of knowledge and experience to the IST team and to the technical community at large.
References
edit- ^ www.sciencecouncil.org Our Members
- ^ istonline.org.uk
- ^ istonline.org.uk vocational-qualifications
- ^ istonline.org.uk training
- ^ www.sciencecouncil.org Archived 16 January 2014 at the Wayback Machine 100-leading-uk-practising-scientists