Investigating Science Communication in the Information Age: Implications for Public Engagement and Popular Media

Investigating Science Communication in the Information Age: Implications for Public Engagement and Popular Media

ISBN-10:
0199552665
ISBN-13:
9780199552665
Pub. Date:
11/30/2008
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0199552665
ISBN-13:
9780199552665
Pub. Date:
11/30/2008
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
Investigating Science Communication in the Information Age: Implications for Public Engagement and Popular Media

Investigating Science Communication in the Information Age: Implications for Public Engagement and Popular Media

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Overview

How are recent policy changes affecting how scientists engage with the public? How are new technologies influencing how scientists disseminate their work and knowledge? How are new media platforms changing the way the public interact with scientific information?

Investigating Science Communication in the Information Age is a collection of newly-commissioned chapters by leading science communication scholars. It addresses current theoretical, practical and policy developments in science communication, including recent calls for greater openness and transparency; and engagement and dialogue on the part of professional scientists with members of the public. It provides a timely and wide-ranging review of contemporary issues in science communication, focusing on two broad themes.

The first theme critically reviews the recent dialogic turn and ascendant branding of 'public engagement with science'. It addresses contemporary theoretical and conceptual issues facing science communication researchers, and draws on a range of methodological approaches and examples.

The second theme, popular media, examines recent trends in the theory and research of these forms of science communication. It includes contemporary accounts of the study of 'traditional' forms of popular media, including television and newspapers, examining how they are produced, represented and consumed. This theme also documents examples where novel forms of popular media are challenging researchers to re-think how they approach these forms of science communication.

A companion volume, Practising Science Communication in the Information Age, provides an ideal introduction to anyone wishing to reflect on the practices of contemporary science communication.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780199552665
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Publication date: 11/30/2008
Series: Communicating Science in the Information Age , #1
Edition description: New Edition
Pages: 320
Product dimensions: 6.70(w) x 9.60(h) x 0.70(d)

About the Author

Richard Holliman is Senior Lecturer in Science Communication at the Open University (OU), UK and production course team chair of Communicating Science in the Information Age. After completing a PhD investigating the representation of contemporary scientific research in television and newspapers in the Department of Sociology at the OU, in 2000 he moved across the campus to the Faculty of Science. Since that time he has worked on a number of undergraduate and postgraduate course teams, producing mixed media materials that address the interface between science and society. He is a member of the Centre for Research in Education and Educational Technology and is currently leading (with colleagues) the ISOTOPE (Informing Science Outreach and Public Engagement) and (In)visible Witnesses research project teams.

Elizabeth Whitelegg is Senior Lecturer in Science Education working in the Science Faculty at the Open University (OU), and Award Director for Science Short Courses. She recently produced (with Professor Patricia Murphy) a review of the research literature on the participation of girls in physics, for the Institute of Physics. Her main research interest is in girls' and women's participation in science and in learning science (particularly physics) at all levels; she is currently leading (with colleagues) the (In)visible Witnesses project. In 2003 she was invited to become a Fellow of the Institute of Physics.

Eileen Scanlon is Professor of Educational Technology and co-Director of the Centre for Research in Education and Educational Technology at the Open University. She is also Visiting Professor in the Moray House School of Education at the University of Edinburgh.

Sam Smidt is a senior lecturer based in the Department of Physics and Astronomy at the Open University, and Programme Director of the MSc in Science. She has interests in physics education and outreach work in promoting science to the public.

Jeff Thomas is a senior lecturer within the Department of Biological Sciences at the Open University. He has worked at the OU all his professional life, contributing to a wide range of teaching initiatives in biology and in health sciences, and more recently to a range of projects concerned with contemporary science issues and on the relationships between science and different publics, at both undergraduate and Masters level. His research interests are concerned with the influence of contemporary science controversies on public attitude, on conceptual problems of learning biological science, and in public involvement in science-based policy-making. He also teaches part-time for Birkbeck College, University of London on its Diploma in Science Communication.

Table of Contents

Section 1 - Engaging with public engagement1.1. Moving forwards or in circles? Science communication and scientific governance in an age of innovation, Alan Irwin1.2. The new politics of public engagement with science?, Jack Stilgoe and James Wilsdon1.3. (In)authentic sciences and (im)partial publics: (re)constructing the science outreach and public engagement agenda, Richard Holliman and Eric JensenSection 2 - Researching public engagement2.1. Investigating science communication to inform science outreach and public engagement, Eric Jensen and Richard Holliman2.2. Learning to engage; engaging to learn: the purposes of informal science-public dialogue, Sarah Davies2.3. Engaging with interactive science exhibits: A study of children's activity and the value of experience, Robin Meisner and Jonathan OsborneSection 3 - Studying science in popular media3.1. Science, communication and media, Anders Hansen3.2. Models of science communication, Joan Leach, Simeon Yates and Eileen ScanlonSection 4 - Mediating science news4.1. Making science newsworthy: exploring the conventions of science journalism, Stuart Allan4.2. Science reporting in the electronic embrace of the Internet, Brian TrenchSection 5 - Communicating science in popular media5.1. From flow to user-flows: Understanding 'good science' programming in the UK digital television landscape, James Bennett5.2. Image-music-text of popular science, Felicity MellorSection 6 - Examining audiences for popular science6.1. Reinterpreting the audiences for media messages about science, Susanna Hornig Priest6.2. Investigating gendered representations of scientists, technologists, engineers and mathematicians on UK children's television, Jenni Carr, Elizabeth Whitelegg, Richard Holliman, Eileen Scanlon and Barbara Hodgson6.3. Interpreting contested science: media influence and scientific citizenship, Richard Holliman and Eileen Scanlon
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