by Gastautor/in | 12. Mai 2010 22:29
(auf internationationaler Konferenz — deshalb heute mal auf Englisch)
Let me share a few points with you that I had the opportunity, today, to make during a presentation and panel at the EU “Media for Science Forum 2010” about public “science debates” like the one during the Obama campaign: In the run-up to the US presidential elections, researchers analysed 171 TV interviews with the candidates, amounting to 2975 questions. Only 6 of those dealt with “climate change” (and 3 with “UFO”s). This was one of major „reasons why“ it came to the “science debate” – generating more than 800 Million page impressions – with dozens of further debates mushrooming in all areas of technology. (see Shawn Lawrence Ottos’s keynote presentation at the 2009 Nobel Conference: http://www.sciencedebate2008.com/www/index.php?id=71 (min. 25-26)).
Is this just an American phenomenon? Which relevance does science have in European politics, European media, and in the general public?
An analysis of prime-time news in European TV shows:
Within our own study („WK Trends„) we also analysed the general elections in Germany 2009 trough the most comprehensive survey among science journalists, science PR, and science centers, as well as among scientists and experts in communication research. The unambiguous result: Less than 1 out of 9 people believed that the relevance of science during the campaign had increased, compared to the previous election. (see Slideshare for first results)
Therefore, an association of German Science Writers (“TELI”), together with founding members of the European Union of Science Journalists‘ Associations (“EUSJA”), also started a public science debate in 2009.
The European Commission has long reacted to these challenges and offers several opportunities for stating your opinion, also on the subject of technology or research policies, e.g. „Your Voice in Europe„.
In Germany, right at this moment, there is an idea contest within the national “Year of Energy Research”.
There are also plans by the European Science Foundation for a transnational science debate.
Every public debate, however, is threatened to become a victim of its own success in three ways:
Since these are actually all journalistic skills, we see a new line of action for science or specialized journalists!
Today, as authors and editors, they are mostly carrying “Science into Society”, whereas in the future they will also be able to carry “Society into Science”!
Among the countless software tools that could be applied to this task are: Mind Map / Mind Meister / Xmind, Compendium, Cohere, BCisive / Rationale, Debategraph and others. The differences lie in their online/offline capability, interactive functions, collaboration etc.
For the MFS conference we have set up a website that demonstrates how the project is basically going to work: http://www.mediaforscience.explorat.de
Here we start with a controversial topic that is at the heart of this conference as well as central to our own project: “Commnication failure or information deficit: Is there really such a thing like this?” We present this issue by using the Debategraph technique of debate-mapping.
The challenge of applying these technologies to future science debates does not lie in re-inventing the wheel by developing yet another software tool without having the learnings from communication research in mind. We need:
a) Empirical Research in order to find out which tools work best in which contexts. The existing body of research in this field is rather dispersed.
b) Methods for the public discourse on science, technology and innovation. Established methods for cooperation management and group moderation have to be transferred to the realm of online deliberation. We will also need qualified people to neutrally conduct and moderate such a discourse (i.e. the new line of action in science journalism).
c) Support from politics as well as from the main scientific institutions, in order to integrate such projects into the real process of defining the research and innovation agenda.
The vision we are working on together with our network partners, has been well described by Mark Klein, Principal Research Scientist at the MIT Center for Collective Intelligence:
„Today, governmental policy-making is complex, cumbersome, and slow. Experts can talk past each other, while experts and policy-makers have unproductive conversations. News media summaries are necessarily incomplete […] Imagine […] a new kind of on-line forum […], used around the world, by […] experts, policy analysts, legislators, and concerned citizens.“
If you think you can help, please do not hesitate to get into touch: debate-20@innokomm.eu
And now: Feel free to engage in a public debate on “media for science” – right here, right now: http://www.mediaforscience.explorat.de
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