Thirty Years of a Science Communication Course in Australia

2017 ◽  
Vol 39 (2) ◽  
pp. 169-194 ◽  
Author(s):  
Merryn McKinnon ◽  
Chris Bryant

Since 1985, the Science Circus program has recruited science graduates Australia-wide and provided them with science communication training leading to a university degree. On qualifying these graduates demonstrate highly diverse career paths reflecting the relevance of science communication training to other disciplines. Graduates, by their activities, have contributed to the growth of science communication as an academic discipline and an “industry”—both in Australia and abroad. It suggests that science communication training can have impact far beyond narrowly defined disciplines and skill sets, and this impact is worthy of further exploration.

2020 ◽  
pp. 107554702097163
Author(s):  
Margaret A. Rubega ◽  
Kevin R. Burgio ◽  
A. Andrew M. MacDonald ◽  
Anne Oeldorf-Hirsch ◽  
Robert S. Capers ◽  
...  

As the science community has recognized the vital role of communicating to the public, science communication training has proliferated. The development of rigorous, comparable approaches to assessment of training has not kept pace. We conducted a fully controlled experiment using a semester-long science communication course, and audience assessment of communicator performance. Evaluators scored the communication competence of trainees and their matched, untrained controls, before and after training. Bayesian analysis of the data showed very small gains in communication skills of trainees, and no difference from untrained controls. High variance in scores suggests little agreement on what constitutes “good” communication.


2010 ◽  
Vol 09 (03) ◽  
pp. C04 ◽  
Author(s):  
Toss Gascoigne ◽  
Donghong Cheng ◽  
Michel Claessens ◽  
Jennifer Metcalfe ◽  
Bernard Schiele ◽  
...  

The present comment examines to what extent science communication has attained the status of an academic discipline and a distinct research field, as opposed to the common view that science communication is merely a sub-discipline of media studies, sociology of science or history of science. Against this background, the authors of this comment chart the progress science communication has made as an emerging subject over the last 50 years in terms of a number of measures. Although discussions are still ongoing about the elements that must be present to constitute a legitimate disciplinary field, we show here that science communication meets four key elements that constitute an analytical framework to classify academic disciplines: the presence of a community; a history of inquiry; a mode of inquiry that defines how data is collected; and the existence of a communications network.


Author(s):  
Holli R. Leggette ◽  
Samuel Thomas Hall ◽  
Theresa Pesl Murphrey

This case study describes the participation of Indonesian journalists in a two-week Cochran Fellowship Program designed to teach about biotechnology and the process of disseminating scientific information. The purpose of this case study was to examine the experience of Indonesian journalists who participated in science communication training in an effort to document practices that improve journalistic writing skills and encourage positive perceptions of biotechnology. Therefore, we collected pre- and post-training reflections, photo reflections, and project debriefing session reflections from six Indonesian journalists who specialized in various types of journalism and worked for private or government-owned news organizations. The reflections revealed changes in comfort level with journalistic writing, thoughts and behaviors, and understanding of the biotechnology process. The journalists showed the most change in comfort level for explaining communication tools; using, evaluating, and choosing communication mediums; and translating science related to biotechnology. They described biotechnology as a highly debated, multi-step process affecting food security and noted that they gained valuable information about science journalism and biotechnology. Training journalists and understanding their voices could enable agriculturalists to more effectively communicate about scientific issues and develop impactful capacity-building activities. Because journalists have the power to inform and influence, programs, like this one, can have far-reaching, beneficial impacts on the adoption of biotechnology. However, researchers should investigate future programs using a longitudinal study to determine if programs influence the stories published in the years following the training


2021 ◽  
Vol 5 ◽  
pp. 164-171
Author(s):  
Miles Coleman ◽  
Susana Santos ◽  
Joy Cypher ◽  
Claude Krummenacher ◽  
Robert Fleming

Some crises, such as those brought on or exposed by the COVID-19 pandemic, are wicked problems—large, complex problems with no immediate answer. As such, they make rich centerpieces for learning with respect to public deliberation and issue-based dialogue. This essay reflects on an experimental, transdisciplinary health and science communication course entitled Comprehending COVID-19. The course represents a collaborative effort among 14 faculty representing 10 different academic departments to create a resource for teaching students how to deliberate the pandemic, despite its attending, oversaturated, fake-news-infused, infodemic. We offer transdisciplinary deliberation as a pedagogical framework to expand communication repertoires in ways useful for sifting through the messiness of an infodemic while also developing key deliberation skills for productively engaging participatory decision-making with concern to wicked problems.


2018 ◽  
Vol 19 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Susanna Greer ◽  
Hannah Alexander ◽  
Thomas O. Baldwin ◽  
Hudson H. Freeze ◽  
Morgan Thompson ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Georg Menz

The study of migration developed in somewhat of an isolated fashion within the academic discipline of political science. It is only recently that the study of migration has been mainstreamed and has entered into dialogue with international and comparative political economy (IPE/CPE). The reasons for this mutual neglect are briefly accounted for. The chapter takes stock of the existing literature and makes a case for more dialogue between the two domains. While academic silo building sadly often interferes with dialogue across different subfields, the issue of immigration certainly could be connected with areas of interest to IPE scholars, such as trade, development, and monetary politics. Immigration regulation is commonly also linked to foreign (economic) policy and more scholarly work could be pursued in this vein. Existing IPE/CPE scholarship has demonstrated the economic considerations that shape migration policy design, such as the composition of the domestic work force, labor market requirements, strategies regarding skill sets, and real or alleged labor shortages, etc. Future scholarship could probe the relationship between migration regulation and development in more detail, as most future migration will likely involve emigration from the Global South. Environmental degradation might also cause larger scale emigration flows that should be of interest to those working on the development-migration nexus. Finally, migration within regional free trade areas, such as ASEAN or the EU, will likely continue to be of policy relevance and important for scholars to examine.


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