ASC-WA – Museum and Mummies Night

27 May 2013
5:45 pmto7:30 pm
Join ASC-WA at the WA Museum to hear from ‘New Museum’ Director Trish McDonald about the plans and vision for the new Museum construction.
This informal talk will be followed by a private viewing of the new exhibition from the British Museum – ‘Secrets of the Afterlife: Magic, Mummies & Immortality in Ancient Egypt’.
Drinks and finger food will be provided prior to the tour.
Monday 27 May, 6.00pm-7.30pm WA Museum (Perth site)
$10 for ASC members
$25 for non ASC members
Register online at Eventbrite
Tickets are limited, so secure yours fast!
(NB: cost covers entry into the Egyptian exhibition and catering – normal entry fee is $20)

Encourage discussion, write for the Big Science Communication Summit – tickets to attend up for grabs!

As you would have seen in Rod’s recent post, ASC is a community partner with the Big Science Communication Summit event in June.

This opens up exciting opportunities for our members to be involved in the event, explore today’s sci comm issues and be on-ground reporters for the event. Tickets to attend are up for grabs and you can have a writer profile on the Summit website.

We are now calling for ASC members to act as ‘stream’ ambassadors, helping to raise awareness of the discussion, promote engagement and report on developments at the Summit. See http://sciencerewired.org/summit/participate/ for more of an idea of what’s happening.

While what you do is open to negotiation – we know people have different interests – there are a couple of goals we’re trying to kick here and we are seeking very active, committed contributors.

1. Before the event: discussion and engagement about the topics. Your mission: pick one or more of the five streams (see below) and write a piece about the topic, which will be posted on the Summit Blog. You will work to explore in the ASC community the issues in sci comm in Australia and drive discussion in social media forums and possibly a live webchat.

2. At the event: promote discussion, tell the stories. Your mission: you are an on-ground reporter, using social media to engage, gathering content and ideas from sessions to write an article or two for the ASC website.

We are seeking current ASC members with the following skills and attributes:

  • confidence in using social media and a participatory attitude to channels including Twitter, Flickr, forums, Wikis, blogs, Reddit, Facebook, etc. Someone who will actively engage with users to promote engagement and moderate discussion on the Summit.
  • science-savvy enthusiast, actively engaged and interested in issues involved in Australian science communication. Someone who will promote discussion and interest in these elements to benefit the Summit attendees and participants.
  • able to work to deadlines and maintain a steady level of involvement in the run-up to the event.

The fun kicks off from the Friday the 17th May working with the Science Rewired team so please send your expression of interest with information about your skills and experience and your preferred stream to jobs@asc.asn.auby Thursday 16th May. (Please note, you must be a current ASC member to participate.)

Claire
ASC Vice President

 

Big Science Communication Summit program and streams: http://sciencerewired.org/summit/program/

The five streams/themes are:
STREAM ONE
It’s a two way street: engaging ALL Australians in the sciences.
Considering Australia’s relatively small and geographically dispersed population, where are the significant gaps within science engagement in Australia and how can we ensure a more equitable system of two-way science communication irrespective of geography, ethnicity, age or social condition? In the future how will we communicate to and learn from under-served groups, such as those living in outer metropolitan, regional and remote areas; Indigenous communities; people for whom English is a second language; and people who are disabled or have limited mobility?

STREAM TWO
Participative science: encouraging the best in citizen science.
How can the platforms and processes of citizen science be used to deliver public science engagement activities across Australia? What are the most valuable ways for science communicators, practitioners and the public to work together?

STREAM THREE
Beyond tweets and blogs: leveraging the changing media landscape.
An exponential increase in the form and function of new media both nationally and internationally has brought into stark relief the complex relationship between science, the media and the public. How can Australian science communicators make the most of the increased opportunities available online? Is there a need for stronger collaboration between scientists, artists, producers and editors to develop new ideas and push the boundaries of traditional media content?

STREAM FOUR
Diminishing degrees of separation: developing collaborative approaches across sectorsWe all hold pieces of the jigsaw that makes up best practice in science communication, and finding ways to more easily collaborate and join our efforts provides for a sum picture greater than any of its parts. Such collaboration needs to occur across state and territory boundaries, between education, science, media/public relations and industry sectors and between key national organisations such as the Academies, Science and Technology Australia, Australian Science Communicators and CSIRO. There are currently a number of networks including the Inspiring Australia officers in each state and territories and nationally, and other federal, state and territory government networks, as well as a national science communications community that cross media, education and private enterprise.Collaboration clearly makes a lot of sense, so what is currently preventing these and other networks better collaborating and maximising their impacts? And do networks make it harder for non-aligned individuals to participate?
This workshop will seek to map better ways to bring those jigsaw puzzle pieces together to collaborate nationally, examine what can realistically be achieved, and discuss what will indicators of success look like?

STREAM FIVE
Data at work: developing the evidence base to guide future action. In order to develop the most robust and effective science communication and engagement projects it is imperative to develop a strong evidence base. What baseline data on science communication in Australia already exists and what vital areas are data-deficient? How should this information be shared and publicised? And what are the ramifications for future funding and policy decisions?

Mixed views on whether Australia is producing too many PhDs

By Ian McDonald (ACT Branch, ASC President)

Canberra’s scientific and research community came out from their labs and offices to the CSIRO Discovery Centre on the 18th of March to discuss the ‘hot topic’ of whether it is possible to have a long term and sustainable career in research. Hosted by the ACT Branch of the ASC and in conjunction with Inspiring Australia an audience of over 100 attended this recorded-for-radio discussion which posed the question ‘Is Australia producing too many PhDs?’

Panel pictured left to right: Dr Jochen Trumpf (Member of NECTAR, an ANU internal early career network), Prof Aidan Byrne (CEO, Australian Research Council), Ms Melanie Hand (soon to be conferred PhD candidate, Dairy Futures CRC), Mr Paul Barclay (Moderator and ABC Radio Host), Dr Marguerite Evans-Galea (Chair, Early-Mid Career Researcher Forum, an initiative of the Australian Academy of Science), and Mr Toss Gascoigne (Author, Australian Council of Learned Academies report, Career Support for Researchers) – Photo by David Wong.

This panel discussion came about after the Department of Industry, Innovation, Science, Research and Tertiary Education commissioned the Australian Council of Learned Academies to investigate the career pathway for researchers in Australia. Science communication consultant and well known ASC member Toss Gascoigne conducted the survey and drafted the report entitled ‘Career support for researchers: Understanding needs and developing a best practice approach.’ The report highlighted job insecurity as the number one problem facing Australian researchers.

This led to the idea of running a panel discussion (including both early career and prominent researchers) about the issues relating to life after completing a PhD. It wasn’t surprising that a large majority of the audience was in fact made up of current postgraduate students, with Canberra being a major Australian university city.

The discussion started with moderator and ABC Radio National Big Ideas host Paul Barclay telling the audience that Australia is currently producing over 7000 PhD graduates annually, nearly twice as many as only a decade ago.  This led towards discussions about the sustainability of the system and where all these graduates go once they graduate, particularly those with a specialised area of expertise.

While it could be argued that many students undertake a PhD in the hope they become full-time lecturers, professors and/or researchers. Aidan Byrne did suggest that a PhD is not just about vocational training for academia.  It also teaches skills such as project management, communication and team work, which can also open up positions in policy development with government agencies or industry sectors once they graduate.

So the problem isn’t that lots of PhD graduates are unemployed and ‘left on the streets’ but that only 1 in 8 graduates actually get the research job they want post PhD.  So there are currently too many PhD graduates produced for the number of jobs available in the research world. Those that do move into research, such as recently submitted PhD panelist Emily, who now works as a post doc with the CSIRO Division of Plant Industry, pointed out that you are generally only employed on an 18-24 month contract. Emily went on to say she personally was fine with this for the time being but posed the question, what about those with families? Or who want to settle down, buy a house and have stability in their life? Short term and erratic contracts are not ideal plus the fact that producing high class research in a limited amount of time – and possibly a new environment – is always challenging.

While Aidan Byrne did point out that grant funding as well the number of jobs in research have increased over time in Australia, it is not at the same rate as the production of graduates. There is a risk that even those who enter the academic/research world immediately post PhD may burn out within the first 10 years due to the heavy workload and pressure to continually fight for grants and positions. Almost 90% of researchers who complete a PhD are not even in an academic field after this time. Toss stated that while there was a lot of feedback into how the system can be improved, most scientists and researchers did love their jobs.  It was the competition for grants and short term contracts (essentially the instability of it) which made scientists angry about the whole system.

Having Aidan Byrne on the panel did put the ARC granting body under the spotlight. Some audience members stated how it costs a significant amount of money to write an ‘unsuccessful’ grant application and in some cases up to 4-6 weeks of an academic’s time, when they could be doing better things. Another notable audience member, Nobel Laureate Brian Schmidt (pictured in foreground) wondered aloud if researchers need to go through the rigorous grant application process each year, once they have proven themselves as a competent researcher.  Should there be different processes required for early career and high profile researchers, he asked.

Another topic was about those who leave the research world but want to return. For example ‘women in science’ who leave to start a family are said to have less of a chance in being successfully re-employed due to challenges of wanting to go part time or not being able to keep up their publication records and skill set when away for an extended period of time. Moreover, it seems that even to this day there is still an issue with males getting paid more than females.

So how do we fix it? Well, it is definitely not an easily solved problem and views are mixed as to how to do so. However most agreed that longer term contracts, more chances for early career researchers to obtain grants and better feedback on why they don’t/can’t receive one in the first place, is a good starting point. Obviously more government funding will be required if the number of PhD graduates continue to increase or the PhD program will need significant changes in order to better prepare PhDs for jobs in industry and the government rather than academia or research.

While this 60 minute panel discussion was a great eye opener, there was obviously lots more discussed than this short article can cover. To find out more check out Twitter #ausphd for some of the more notable comments and listen to the edited panel discussion on the ABC Radio Big Ideas programPodcast available for download on their website.

We would also like to thank the ASC executive committee (and Rod Lamberts – pictured front of photo tweeting avidly at the event) for allocating funds to our branch to help run the event. This was very much appreciated. More photos taken by our Digital Media Officer David Wong can be seen on our Facebook page.

For further enquiries about the event or upcoming ACT Branch events please email asccanberra@gmail.com

From the President – Rod’s update

Howdy folks,

Well aren’t these exciting times to be an ASC-ist? This month marks the beginning of the formal process we hope will lead the ASC down the path to professionalisation.

Professionalisation will lift the value of everyone’s ASC membership to the next level. Being a member of a professional ASC association should be a peer-endorsement of competence (hell, let’s say excellence) in whatever aspect of science communication that member operates. I personally would love to see a time where people who want to engage science communication services actively look for membership of the ASC as a badge of trustworthiness and expertise that is second to none.

The call for initial submissions went out from Will Grant to the ASC list on March 27, and already a solid handful of responses has come back. We have received interesting and useful thoughts, and also some offers of help to move us ahead. There is a very enthusiastic vibe surrounding this process so far, and I hope any and all of you who are interested will get on the band wagon.

Of course, this is not a trivial exercise, and the ramifications are not trivial either. If you have any ideas or comments, concerns or reservations, please contact Will or me.

We are also now in the build-up to the Big Science Communication Summit in June, an event that will have a strong ASC presence woven throughout (stay tuned for more via the list). For me, this really marks the beginning of the countdown to the ASC conference in February 2014, and I expect that issues, ideas and relationships from the Summit will inspire us in building our own conference.

And speaking of the 2014 ASC national conference … would you like to be part of the conference team? We need a few dedicated and idea-rich folks to play with us starting ASAP. Please contact me if you want to explore the wonder that is the ASC conference committee!

Cheers for now,

Rod

Dr Rod Lamberts

National President

Australian Science Communicators

http://www.asc.asn.au/

 

Profile – Anna-Maria Arabia, Questacon

Interview with Anna-Maria Arabia, General Manager, Strategy and Partnerships, Questacon
Words: Sally Miles

Anna-Maria Arabia has recently taken on the role of General Manager, Strategy and Partnerships, at Questacon. She has hit the ground running and is using her passion for science education to build on Questacon’s world class science engagement activities.

While Questacon’s science centre is aimed mainly at primary and early secondary students, the approach to make science fun and interesting appeals to all ages. In fact, staff pay close attention to ensuring each exhibit can be enjoyed by all. The exhibits are produced and delivered by a team of very talented, creative people who are responsive to feedback from everyone who interacts with the exhibits.

But Questacon is a lot more than one great science centre.  From national initiatives as part of the Inspiring Australia strategy, to on-tour programs and exhibitions, the organisation does its fair share of community outreach.

This even extends to international partnerships with science centres around the world. Questacon engages with many countries by sharing ideas, developing skills and overall capacity building. This includes training their staff in science communication and even bringing exhibits across the seas.

Domestically, Questacon maintains relationships with both the public and private sectors.  Anna-Maria emphasises the benefits of strategies such as those of Inspiring Australia.

Inspiring Australia is a bridge to many initiatives. It is a classic case of the whole being greater than the sum of its parts”. Inspiring Australia offers many things, including national leadership, partnership opportunities across the country, and a great array of activities to get involved in.

Anna-Maria recognises science centres as an important part of our overall science education. Informal out-of-school science learning at Questacon complements formal education that happens in the classroom.

“Science Centres play a critical role in engaging children in science education.” Anna-Maria says. Questacon, one of Canberra’s most popular tourist attractions, uses hands-on interactive exhibits and a philosophy of ‘science by doing’ to motivate and inspire many thousands of students every year.

Questacon is a great vehicle to switch people on to science. It will continue to play an important role in the future of science education, and Anna-Maria looks forward to contributing towards a future of greater science engagement and inspiration.

Thank you, Anna-Maria, for taking the time out of an already hectic schedule to talk about science communication. We look forward to hearing more about the fantastic initiatives at Questacon.