CREATIVELY COMMUNICATING BIOLOGY & ECOLOGY

May 8-13 with Dr. Hannah Rogers, Columbia University

Writing is fundamental to the practice of science. We observe, think, and write 
about individual 
organisms, ecosystems, patterns and anomalies, to record our findings, and to 
reach broader publics. 
This course will aim to make students better writers as they communicate both 
inside specialist 
knowledge communities and with other citizens. The course will introduce a 
variety of writers, past and 
present, who have worked on environmental and ecological topics and consider 
the careful observations 
writers have made about the natural world. Social media, creative non-fiction, 
video clips, graphical 
images, and podcasts have joined more traditional journalistic accounts in 
print media as the means by 
which science communicates with the public. Many of these methods are 
increasingly important as 
interscience communication as videos have become a major means of sharing data. 
At the same time, 
imagination is still shaping science in areas like nature writing, critical 
design, eco-art, and science 
fiction, and these genres offer important ways to think about the capacity for 
feedback in science 
communication. In this course, students will experience the field station 
environment of Highlands and 
use these experiences to create a portfolio using a range of science 
communication genres from 
websites and podcasts to environmental journalism pieces to share new 
information, begin 
conversations about scientific ideas, consider hooks and approaches to create 
audience interest, and 
think both practically and theoretically about the best ways to communicate 
science.
FAQ/Apply Now  See http://highlandsbiological.org/summer-2017/ for all course 
listings and information.

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