Journalists and scientists to talk about communication as a critical 
element of science

TEMPE, Ariz. — Some of the nation's leading scientists and science 
journalists will present their perspectives on the roles of 
scientists and engineers in popular communication during a symposium 
April 2 at Arizona State University titled "Essential Dialogues: Why 
Scientists and Engineers Must Not Speak in Tongues."
 
The symposium, sponsored by the Hendricks Family Foundation, is one 
of several activities planned this spring to mark the official launch 
of ASU's School of Earth and Space Exploration, a groundbreaking 
endeavor in higher education that fuses Earth and space sciences with 
engineering.
 
"In today's world, there can be no true `literacy' without scientific 
literacy," says Kip Hodges, professor and founding director of the 
school. "People need a basic understanding of how the universe works 
and how scientific principles inform the development of new 
technologies. And there can be no better ambassador for science and 
technology than a scientist or an engineer who can explain the 
importance of their work to non-specialists."
 
The School of Earth and Space Exploration will make popular science 
and engineering communication an essential part of both the graduate 
and undergraduate curricula, according to Hodges. "In order to 
underscore this mission, we've gathered some of the nation's top 
science writers and scientists to talk about how scientists and 
engineers can be most effective in how they communicate," he says.
 
Among the speakers is Robert Irion, director of the science 
communication program at the University of California-Santa Cruz, who 
will address the theme of the symposium head on with his 
talk "Scientists as Journalists: Training the Next Generation." 
Irion, who has an undergraduate degree in Earth and planetary 
sciences from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and a 
graduate certificate from the UC-Santa Cruz program, is co-author of 
the award-winning book One Universe: At Home in the Cosmos. He also 
received the 2003 David Schramm Award in Science Journalism from the 
American Astronomical Society for a story in Science magazine about 
neutron stars.
 
Natalie Angier, a Pulitzer-Prize winning New York Times science 
journalist and non-fiction author, will talk about "Scientists and 
Journalists: Can't We All Just Get Along?" The Barnard College 
graduate studied English, physics and astronomy while in college and 
dreamed of starting a popular magazine about science for intelligent 
lay readers. Instead, at the age of 22, she was hired as a founding 
staff reporter and writer for Discover, the science magazine that 
Time Inc. launched in 1980. Angier is the author of four books; her 
newest due out this spring is The Canon: A Whirligig Tour of the 
Beautiful Basics of Science, which she will talk about at a reception 
from noon to 1 p.m. April 3 in the Virginia G. Piper Writers House at 
ASU.
 
Charles Petit, who has covered science for more than 35 years as a 
newspaper, news magazine and freelance writer, will present his 
perspective in a talk titled "The Science Beat: News that Really is 
New." Petit's career includes 26 years at the San Francisco Chronicle 
and several years on staff at U.S. News & World Report. His recent 
work has appeared in National Geographic, Smithsonian Magazine and 
The New York Times. While he was at U.S. News, the American 
Association for the Advancement of Science awarded him its magazine 
science writing award for a set of articles on fusion research, on 
the first peopling of the Americas and on the computer adaptation of 
evolution as an engineering tool. Petit has a degree in astronomy 
from the University of California-Berkeley.
 
Seth Shostak, the senior astronomer at the SETI Institute, has 
written several hundred popular magazine and Web articles on various 
topics in astronomy, technology, film and television. He has an 
undergraduate degree in physics from Princeton University and a 
doctorate in astronomy from the California Institute of Technology. 
For much of his career, Shostak conducted radio astronomy research on 
galaxies, and has published nearly 60 papers in professional 
journals. Each week he hosts the SETI Institute's science radio 
show "Are We Alone?" broadcast on Discovery Channel Radio. His talk 
at the symposium is titled "Science Searches for Extraterrestrials."
 
Tom Levenson, an award winning writer-producer, is an associate 
professor of science writing at the Massachusetts Institute of 
Technology. Author of several books, including the acclaimed 
biography Einstein in Berlin, Levenson also is a Peabody and Emmy 
award-winning documentary filmmaker who has produced a number of 
prime-time science documentaries. He has had several articles and 
reviews published in The Atlantic Monthly, The Boston Globe, Discover 
and The Sciences. Levenson, who has an undergraduate degree from 
Harvard University, will present the talk "Against `Science 
Literacy.'"
 
The symposium will be held from 8 to 11:30 a.m. in the Biodesign 
Institute Auditorium, B Building, on ASU's Tempe campus.
 
Also planned as part of the official launch activities is a second 
symposium titled "Emerging Vistas: The New Golden Age of 
Exploration." Scheduled from 8 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. April 10, this 
symposium includes international leaders in field-based scientific 
research as well as space and undersea exploration. The symposium 
will be held in the Biodesign Institute Auditorium, B Building, on 
ASU's Tempe campus. It will be followed by a reception and official 
launch ceremony with ASU President Michael M. Crow at 4:30 p.m. in 
the Administration Building A Courtyard. 
 
An evening lecture – "Lunar Field Exploration: the Post-Shoemaker 
Era" – will be presented at 7:30 April 10 in Armstrong Hall by 
Harrison H. Schmitt, an Apollo astronaut and former U.S. senator. 
Schmitt will receive the Shoemaker Memorial Award, presented by 
BEYOND, ASU's Center for Fundamental Concepts in Science.
 
All events are free and open to the public. Seating is limited and 
reservations are recommended. Registration and additional information 
are available at sese.asu.edu or (480) 965-5081.


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