Iโve been meaning to thrown in my congratulations to Gavin Schmidt of NASA and RealClimate.org, who is the first recipient of the American Geophysical Unionโs new $ 25,000 annual prize for the yearโs top climate scienceย communicator.
Yes, you read that right, $ 25,000! (Full disclosure: I am on the board of directors of the American Geophysical Union, but I did not select Schmidt for the prize or have fore-knowledge of his selection; nor was I involved in the creation of the prize, which is funded by Natureโsย Own.)
Schmidt is a very worthy choiceโRealClimate.org has revolutionized climate science communication online since its inception in the mid-2000s. And Schmidt has built from that platform to become a major commentator, and a lucid one at that, on outlets like CNN.
But at least as newsy as Schmidtโs choice is the creation of this prize in the firstย place.
I can think of no greater signal that scientific organizations are placing a new value on communication, and a premium value at that. The AGU/Nature’s Own prize is highly symbolic of changes that are occurring throughout the scientific community today, across disciplines and institutions, as communication and outreach are increasingly looked upon not as second fiddle to research, but as a necessary complement and coreย priority.
Itโs not just climate science communicators, by the wayโthough they have, of necessity, been on theย forefront.
But consider the Soil Science Society of America (SSSA), for whom I just delivered a plenary address in San Antonioย yesterday.
When I arrived, SSSA leadership introduced me to their new public information campaign to spread the word about how the study of soils benefits society. Theyโve put out three powerful and well produced videos that emphasize how this research pays off in terms of human health, clean water, and food security. (Watch them here, here, and here.)
As I think youโll see when you watch these spectacular videos, this is high level stuff, and I hope it gets a very broad airing. And just as AGUโs $ 25,000 prize shows the value placed on science communication by that leading geosciences society, so the Soil Societyโs new ad campaign demonstrates the premium it places on communication andย outreach.
Iโve explained before why this is happening nowโwhy scientists are awakening to the need to communicate. Itโs a combination of frustration and necessity: Even as much of America continues to ignore or even attack scientific knowledge, the mediaโwhich never did such a a great job covering science in the first placeโare now fleeing science coverage across theย board.
Scientists now recognize that if they donโt step up, nobodyย will.
That awareness has been building for some time. But there was always a critical need for it to be accompanied by institutional incentives to reward those scientists who do excel at communicatingโand structural changes in academia and at funding agencies that show similar priorities. And now, weโre observing those changes asย well.
For science communication, it’s a brand newย day.
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