Science communication competition brings research into the real world
“We need more scientists who can explain their work clearly, explain science to the public, and help us build a science-literate world.”
“We need more scientists who can explain their work clearly, explain science to the public, and help us build a science-literate world.”
The fellowship will incubate early-career science journalists, providing them with a year of skill-building freelance experience and dedicated mentorship.
Brian Mernoff of the Department of Aeronautics and Astronautics offers best practices to get the most out of your eclipse experience.
The event featured updates from faculty and staff from across MIT, as well as a panel on communicating climate in the media.
From a scholarly monograph on Haitian language to a feminist history of social media photography, grant recipients bring new perspectives to the world through the MIT Press.
The MIT Environmental Solutions Journalism Fellowship provides support to journalists dedicated to connecting local stories to broader climate contexts.
Nine open-access books cross 10,000 reads threshold, bringing total for Direct to Open titles to almost 425,000.
The Knight Science Journalism Program at MIT announces a new one-semester fellowship to start in fall 2024.
PhD student Fatima Husain investigates the co-evolution of life and Earth and works to communicate science to the public.
The Knight Science Journalism Program’s Victor K. McElheny Award honors outstanding local and regional journalists’ reporting on science, public health, tech, and the environment.
Kathryn Wysocki Gunsch, the museum’s deputy director, will serve as interim director until Gorman takes up his post this summer.
Associate Professor Lydia Bourouiba and artist Argha Manna take readers through a series of discoveries in infectious disease.
With her new book, photographer Felice Frankel hopes to make scientists and engineers better visual communicators.
Ten years after the founding of the undergraduate research program, its alumni reflect on the unexpected gifts of their experiences.
Partisan media might deepen political polarization, but we should measure people’s media habits more carefully before drawing conclusions, researchers say.