"Social tools are a way to answer the phone for your readers," said Mark Coatney, director/media evangelist at tumblr. Its value is in interaction with your reader.
Nov. 6, 2010NASW news
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Annie Paul, author of Origins: How the Nine Months Before Birth Shape the Rest of Our Lives, did not take the usual, ho-hum road to pen her book. “I went to extreme measures,” she jokes. “I got pregnant.”
Nov. 6, 2010Overheard last night from a sleeping science writer who wishes to remain anonymous: "Mumble mumble Twitter mumble."
Nov. 6, 2010It’s all about the audience. This morning’s panel “Your next book will be a pixel: Navigating e-books and e-rights” emphasized the importance of engaging with your readers both before and after the publication process
Nov. 6, 2010From China to Chile, great science stories happen all over the world. Scientists have long been collaborating with their colleagues across international borders, and the World Federation of Science Journalists is helping science
Nov. 6, 2010There are many ways to get statistics wrong, and we learned about some of them from the speakers at the 'Get the numbers right: A workshop on reporting statistics' session. They also offered advice on how journalists could avoid the common mistakes and treat statistics right. Clearly this is a topic that many people care about, judging by how packed the room was.
Nov. 6, 2010Panelists tackling solutions to the collapse of science literacy and the collapse of science journalism differed radically on how to get the public interested in science and reading about it.
Nov. 6, 2010If you had $1 to spend on improving science literacy in America, how would you spend it? That was the question posed by Rick Borchelt, an organizer of today's Civics of science session, to panelists Carolyn L. Funk, Jon Miller, and Chris Mooney.
Nov. 6, 2010More on this morning's session, "How to be an effective science PIO in the changing media world." This time, we hear about PIOs on the panel.
Nov. 6, 2010