Science for Progress   /     52 B&D Online Teaching, SciComm, and the Populist Fringes

Description

My co-host Bart Geurten and I had a rather spontaneous conversation, again. We talk about remote teaching, how science communication and science journalism could be supported by the public, and speculate about how the political fringe might be missing a sense of belonging. Following a catch-up about our lives in the pandemic, we talk about […] The post 52 B&D Online Teaching, SciComm, and the Populist Fringes appeared first on Science for Progress.

Summary






My co-host Bart Geurten and I had a rather spontaneous conversation, again. We talk about remote teaching, how science communication and science journalism could be supported by the public, and speculate about how the political fringe might be missing a sense of belonging.



Following a catch-up about our lives in the pandemic, we talk about taking lectures online. Should we do it? Are there circumstances when it makes sense? Or does it remove important social interactions among students?









We then talk about science communication. There was a hearing in the German Bundestag about how the parliament could install a funding mechanism for science communication and science journalism. One of the issues is that journalism is under a lot of pressure to make profits.



This, finally, led us to discuss - once more - the plight of populism. Does it provide people with a sense of belonging?





Dennis risks his life and hearing to demonstrate the dangerous noise from wind-turbines:




https://youtu.be/AOFR4XuClkM




Academic Writing Videos by Dennis:




https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AgGJBLboYtc&list=PLjZptrQXtspB7c5rAvU_RItVzBqv1JvzE





Subtitle
My co-host Bart Geurten and I had a rather spontaneous conversation, again. We talk about remote teaching, how science communication and science journalism could be supported by the public, and speculate about how the political fringe might be missing ...
Duration
38:08
Publishing date
2020-08-03 14:18
Link
https://www.scienceforprogress.eu/52-bd-online-teaching-scicomm-and-the-populist-fringes/
Contributors
  Dennis Eckmeier, Science for Progress
author  
Enclosures
https://traffic.libsyn.com/secure/sciforprogress/52_-_BD_final.mp3
audio/mpeg

Shownotes

My co-host Bart Geurten and I had a rather spontaneous conversation, again. We talk about remote teaching, how science communication and science journalism could be supported by the public, and speculate about how the political fringe might be missing a sense of belonging.

Following a catch-up about our lives in the pandemic, we talk about taking lectures online. Should we do it? Are there circumstances when it makes sense? Or does it remove important social interactions among students?

Listen to the Full Conversation on Patreon!

We then talk about science communication. There was a hearing in the German Bundestag about how the parliament could install a funding mechanism for science communication and science journalism. One of the issues is that journalism is under a lot of pressure to make profits.

This, finally, led us to discuss – once more – the plight of populism. Does it provide people with a sense of belonging?

Do you have questions, comments or suggestion? Email info@scienceforprogress.eu, write us on facebook or twitter, or leave us a video message on Skype for dennis.eckmeier.

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Dennis risks his life and hearing to demonstrate the dangerous noise from wind-turbines:

Academic Writing Videos by Dennis:

The post 52 B&D Online Teaching, SciComm, and the Populist Fringes appeared first on Science for Progress.