Abstract

During a week-long celebration of science, run under the federally supported National Science Week umbrella, the Catch a Rising Star: women in Queensland research (CaRS) programme flew scientists who identify as women to nine regional and remote communities in the Australian State of Queensland. The aim of the project was twofold: first, to bring science to remote and regional communities in a large, economically diverse state; and second, to determine whether media and public engagement provides career advancement opportunities for women scientists. This paper focuses on the latter goal. The data show: (i) a substantial majority (greater than 80%) of researchers thought the training and experience provided by the programme would help develop her career as a research scientist in the future, (ii) the majority (65%) thought the programme would help relate her research to end users, industry partners or stakeholders in the future, and (iii) analytics can help create a compelling narrative around engagement metrics and help to quantify influence. During the week-long project, scientists reached 600 000 impressions on one social media platform (Twitter) using a program hashtag. The breadth and depth of the project outcomes indicate funding bodies and employers could use similar data as an informative source of metrics to support hiring and promotion decisions. Although this project focused on researchers who identify as women, the lessons learned are applicable to researchers representing a diverse range of backgrounds. Future surveys will help determine whether the CaRS programme provided long-term career advantages to participating scientists and communities.

Highlights

  • Introduction75% of the fastest growing occupations in Australia require science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM) skills [1]

  • According to recent estimates, 75% of the fastest growing occupations in Australia require science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM) skills [1]

  • A substantial majority thought the programme was somewhat or very useful for their career development, and more than 80% thought the training and experience provided would help develop her career as a research scientist in the future

Read more

Summary

Introduction

75% of the fastest growing occupations in Australia require science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM) skills [1]. In 2011, 2.3 million individuals in Australia were employed in the STEM workforce: 32% of those were university qualified and 68% vocational education and training qualified [2]. 5.7 million individuals in Australia had non-STEM qualifications. In Australia, distance is an integral concept to policy as the distances individuals are required to travel to access services, including education, can be considerable. Queensland is the second largest state in Australia, at approximately 2 million km Local and national media experts volunteered their time to talk about what makes a good science story, how they find their science stories and provided practical strategies to help scientists communicate their findings to the public

Objectives
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call