BEST MAMAS CONTEST

ESA's Public Affairs Committee announces a contest for the best MAMAS
(Maxims, Analogies, Metaphors, Anecdotes, Similes) to communicate
ecological knowledge



1st Prize: Full refund of Memphis Annual Meeting registration

2nd Prize: One year ESA membership & online subscription to journals

3rd Prize: ESA t-shirt & travel mug

Best Student Prize: One year ESA membership, includes Frontiers journal

Background:

Explaining the complexity of ecological systems to policy makers and the
public is challenging for ecologists.  The Ecological Society of
America's Public Affairs Committee is hosting an evening session that
will address the use of analogies, metaphors, anecdotes, etc. to explain
complex ecological principals.  The session will include seasoned
ecologists with a flair for using MAMAS and will center on the best
submissions received via this competition.

To participate:

Entries should be no more than one page in length and should feature
your favorite Maxim, Analogy, Metaphor, Anecdote, or Simile as it
relates to the science of ecology.  Please indicate the source (whether
it is your own or if it is accredited to someone else) and the context
in which it has been effectively used (e.g. during a radio interview;
before a Rotary Club, in a lecture hall).  Submissions should include
full name and all contact information.  ESA student members are
especially encouraged to participate in this competition.

Members of the Public Affairs Committee will presort all entries and the
top 10-30 finalists will be highlighted during the Annual Meeting
Evening Session, "Ecological Analogies, Metaphors, & Anecdotes" on
Tuesday, August 8, 8 - 10 PM.   Prize winners will also be announced.

The Goal:

We hope to create an on-line database, searchable by topic, which will
be available to all ESA members for use in outreach activities.  All
sources of the best MAMAS will be acknowledged.

Definitions:

Maxims - a pithy statement of general wisdom, e.g. "where there's smoke,
there's fire"

Analogies - comparing similarities between things otherwise unlike, e.g.
"hot is to cold as fire is to ice"

Metaphors -implied comparison, e.g. "All the world's a stage"

Anecdotes - Personal experience/story

Simile - an explicit comparison, e.g. "Her tears flowed like wine"

Submit your entry by Friday, July 7, 2006 to [EMAIL PROTECTED]  You will be
contacted by late July if your submission is a finalist to be presented
at the Evening Session during the Annual Meeting. 

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