培训早期职业五大湖科学家有效参与和影响

Jennifer Hunnell, Heather A. Triezenberg, Diane M. Doberneck
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引用次数: 1

摘要

世界各地的淡水系统正日益面临复杂的环境问题。在劳伦森大湖地区,有害藻华就是一个例子,它横跨农业、市政饮用水、科学和监测、水质和人类健康。应对这些挑战和跨越利益相关者的利益需要可靠的科学和额外的技能,而这些技能在学徒研究模式中不一定会教给研究生。利益攸关方的有效参与和科学传播是两个与国家科学基金会、国家卫生研究院的信息和传播以及国家卫生研究院环境卫生科学研究所的社区参与所强调的更广泛影响相一致的领域。缺乏这些领域的培训造成了外联、参与和科学传播培训方面的差距,这些培训有助于使研究人员将重要的科学转化为有影响力的利益相关者、决策者和公众。为了解决这一差距,我们为研究生和早期职业教师举办了一个社区参与奖学金研讨会。该研讨会采用了一个已建立的社区参与框架,旨在解决有害藻华这一复杂的环境问题。它涉及四种社区参与能力,包括社区参与的伙伴关系、社区参与的教学、社区参与的研究和科学传播。在这里,我们报告了这四种能力的变化和参与者满意度的评估结果。最后,我们讨论了潜在的改进和那些寻求举办类似社区参与培训的人的下一步行动。
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Training Early Career Great Lakes Scientists for Effective Engagement and Impact
Freshwater systems worldwide are increasingly facing complex environmental issues. In the Laurentian Great Lakes region, harmful algal blooms are one example spanning agriculture, municipal drinking water, science and monitoring, water quality, and human health. Addressing these challenges and working across stakeholder interests requires sound science and additional skills that are not necessarily taught to graduate students in the apprentice research model. Effective stakeholder engagement and science communication are two areas consistent with emphases on broader impacts from the National Science Foundation, information and dissemination of the National Institutes of Health, and community engagement of the National Institutes of Health’s Institute of Environmental Health Sciences. The lack of training in these areas creates a gap for outreach, engagement, and science communication training to help enable researchers to translate important science to influential stakeholders, policy makers, and members of the public. To address this gap, we held a Community-Engaged Scholarship Workshop for graduate students and early career faculty. The workshop used an established community-engagement framework and was tailored to address the complex environmental issue of harmful algal blooms. It addressed four community-engagement competencies, including community-engaged partnerships, community-engaged teaching and learning, community-engaged research, and science communications. Here, we report evaluation results on changes in these four competencies and participant satisfaction. We conclude with a discussion of potential improvements and next steps for those seeking to host similar community-engaged trainings.
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Issue Information Skills Development in Hydrologic Sciences for Cohorts of Graduate Students from Morocco, Egypt, Türkiye, and Indonesia Aligning Audience Needs with Scientists’ Information in the Complex Harmful Algal Bloom Outreach to Engagement Continuum Issue Information Determinants of Water Source Choice for Irrigation in the Arkansas Delta
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