SC3.8 | Communicating Your Science: Blogs, Press Releases, and Media Interviews
EDI
Communicating Your Science: Blogs, Press Releases, and Media Interviews
Co-organized by EOS1/CR8/GD7
Convener: Christina Anna Orieschnig | Co-conveners: Archita Bhattacharyya, Marius Schlaak, Liliana Macotela, Shalenys Bedoya-Valestt
Tue, 05 May, 16:15–18:00 (CEST)
 
Room 0.55
Tue, 16:15
How can you ensure your research is heard within your community and beyond? Reaching the public, policymakers, or journalists requires more than good science: it takes clear and engaging communication. This short course will provide guidance on how you can share your work through press releases, blogs, and media interviews. You will learn practical tips for writing popular science pieces, how to avoid common mistakes when speaking to the media, and how to get ready for interviews. Join us to get tips to build confidence and develop essential skills to communicate your science clearly and engage with a wider audience.

Invited Speakers: 

Simon Clark: "Once More With Feeling: Emotion and Storytelling In SciComm"

Simon D. A. Clark (they/them) - Simon is the Projects Manager at the European Geosciences Union Executive Office, where co-ordinate and deliver the Union's online events, webinars and workshops. A science communicator with a PhD in climate change and risk, Simon strives to make science accessible by engaging non-expert audiences, including collaborations with multiple museums, artists and, most, recently, they spoke on Climate Action at stage at Superblume Music Festival. Simon also has works at the science-policy interface, having worked for academic, private and (quasi)-non-governmental organizations supporting evidence-based decision-making at the EU-level, including working with the EU Commission and European Parliament.

Lucia Perez-Diaz: "Science (in pictures)"

Dr. Lucia Perez-Diaz is a computational geoscientist and author-illustrator based in Oxford (UK). In her scientific work, she creates computer models of large-scale geological processes like the break-up of continents and formation and evolution of oceans (which are, in turn, used to learn about the direct impact of these events on the evolution of life and climate on Earth). Lucia's journey into illustration and design started during her PhD studies as a way to open up scientific discovery to broader audiences and convey complex topics in engaging ways. Having spent the best part of the last decade somewhere in the intersection of science and art, she now spends some of her time teaching scientists about the power of visuals for scientific communication.

The oral presentations are given in a hybrid format supported by a Zoom meeting featuring on-site and virtual presentations. The button to access the Zoom meeting appears 15 minutes before the time block starts.

Speakers

  • Simon Clark, European Geosciences Union, Germany
  • Lucia Perez-Diaz, United Kingdom