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.”
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.
For MIT CSHub postdoc Miaomiao Zhang, communicating effectively is perhaps the most important part of research.
With support from 322 libraries — a 33 percent increase in participation over its first year — the D2O publishing model will include over 160 scholarly monographs and edited collections by the end of 2023.
The Brazilian social justice reporter is a fellow at the MIT Center for International Studies.
Professor Emerita Nancy Hopkins and journalist Kate Zernike discuss the past, present, and future of women at MIT and beyond.
Hailing from seven countries and five continents, 10 mid-career journalists join a storied program at MIT.
Abdullahi Tsanni wants to broaden understanding and expand coverage of science research in Africa.
The national award from the Knight Science Journalism Program at MIT recognizes The Charlotte Observer and the Raleigh News & Observer for their series, “Big Poultry.”
The grants expand funding for authors whose work brings diverse and chronically underrepresented perspectives to scholarship in the arts, humanities, and sciences.