Take a look at what our colleagues are reading about us in the latest issue of ScienceWriters, the quarterly magazine for members of the National Association of Science Writers. Thanks to Richard Saltus for the writeup and Dianne Finch for the photos. Continue reading
Building a Future in Health & Science Journalism
Building Online Communities in Health, Science and Technology News
The future of health, science and technology journalism is being forged, in part, by several reporters and editors in the Boston area who have taken the lead in creating online news operations serving specific audiences in new ways. Continue reading
Build it … and they will come.
The Internet has enabled new models of journalism, and some of the pioneering online news sites have specialized in science, health and technology content. Stay tuned to NESW emails for details on a panel discussing the editorial strategies, staffing tactics and business models that have worked and what’s changing.
Wednesday, 18 January 2011
Building Online Communities in Health, Science and Technology News
MIT Faculty Club, Cambridge, Mass.
- Bob Buderi, founder of Xconomy
- Carey Goldberg, co-host of WBUR CommonHealth
- Gabrielle Strobel, executive editor of AlzForum
- Ethan Zuckerman, founder of Global Voices
- Panel moderator: Alison Bass, health care blogger
UPDATE (1/9/12): Register now at https://web.memberclicks.com/mc/quickForm/viewForm.do?orgId=nesw&formId=112835
Cost:
$15 for NESW members and 2011-12 Knight fellows
$20 for guest attendees
NESW makes news
NESW Member Noelle Swan found news at an October 20 New England Science Writers event; a primer on Special Relativity and the faster-than-light neutrinos story by Harvard Professor Gary Feldman.
The Science of Counting Fish: June 18
What: Fishermen and some scientists rail against catch limits they believe are overly harsh, imposed by marine scientists and government officials who claim that certain species are dangerously overfished. The science of assessing fish populations is inexact, say our two speakers, who will discuss new technologies under development that may more accurately “count” fish and know whether or not fisheries are indeed healthy.
When: 2 pm, Saturday, June 18
Where: New Bedford Whaling Museum, downtown New Bedford ($10 per person at the door)
Who: Ocean engineer Hanumant Singh, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution; and
Marine biologist Kevin Stokesbury, School for Marine Science & Technology, UMass Dartmouth
Reception: 4:30-5:30 pm, at a pub up the street (cash bar).
RSVP: to organizer Ann Parson parson-a (at) verizon.net by June 14 (or call 508-984-1955). Parking & bus information upon RSVP.