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Marie Weiel-Potyagaylo Post 1

9 March 2020, 2:04 PM

Communication Strategies

Personally, I tend to be overcritical with my own work and often think that it is of no greater value or use for others or “the society”. That is why I would like to get in touch with interested “non-scientist” citizens to just discuss and hear their opinions and thoughts on this and fundamental research in general. For this, specific panel discussions open to the public could be suitable, where researchers present their work in an entertaining but scientifically valid way (I know this is harder as it seems) followed by an open moderated discussion. Such a format would provide an appropriate framework, where both researchers and citizens could potentially mutually enrich each other.

In addition, I like the idea of carefully preparing one’s research in a popular-scientific way, e.g., writing an article or creating a video, and posting it online. In this way, one may take on a different perspective on the own work, which sometimes can really help, and further get in touch with people interested in the topic.


Emma Harris

Emma Harris
Moderator
Post 2 in reply to 1

11 March 2020, 12:15 PM

Hi Marie

Those all sounds like great ideas. I think talking to 'the public' can really improve your understanding and insight into your own research.

One way you can get started is to approach an existing science communication platform and ask to be a guest contributor e.g. do a special video for a popular science YouTube channel, or write a blog article for an established website. If your institute has any kind of science festival or open days you can volunteer for those. In doing this you get a feel for how you want to present your research before having to build your own science comm 'brand'.