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Hey you, let me tell you about my research
Provider: Faculty of Health and Medical Sciences
Activity no.: 3768-19-00-03
Enrollment deadline: 15/10/2019
Date and time
15.11.2019, at: 08:30 - 29.11.2019, at: 16:00
Regular seats
12
Course fee
3,120.00 kr.
Lecturers
Charlotte Strøm
ECTS credits
1.90
Contact person
Charlotte Strøm E-mail address: cs@sharpen.dk
Enrolment Handling/Course Organiser
PhD administration E-mail address: phdkursus@sund.ku.dk
Aim and content
This is a generic course. This means that the course is reserved for PhD students at the Graduate School of Health and Medical Sciences at UCPH. Anyone can apply for the course, but if you are not a PhD student at the Graduate School, you will be placed on the waiting list until enrollment deadline. After the enrolment deadline, available seats will be allocated to the waiting list.
The course is free of charge for PhD students at Danish universities (except Copenhagen Business School). All other participants must pay the course fee.
Course title
HEY YOU, LET ME TELL YOU ABOUT MY RESEARCH How to reach out to the public through the media
Learning objectives
A student who has met the objectives of the course will be able to:
1. Have insight into and understand the basic news criteria of the media, the inverted journalistic triangle, and the basic principles of journalistic writing
2. Understand how journalists work and know how to collaborate with them on communicating your research.
3. Identify target groups and differentiate between different media when pitching the story about your research.
4. Know and demonstrate the use of different journalistic genres aimed for various media (blogs, press release, essay, discussion or feature article) with the purpose of disseminating science and extend the public’s knowledge and benefits of scientific work.
5. Use basic and easy-to-use tools for how to communicate to an audience that reaches beyond the scientific peers.
Content
Knowledge obligates. All scientists need to tell the world about their findings and research, but many do not like having to convey to the media because they feel that journalists turn their story in directions they do not come to terms with. The rules of communication, as we know them from the scientific world, are fundamentally different when communicating to the public through the media. This difference may may give rise to misunderstandings and at worst conflicts.
When scientists apply for national or international funding for doing research the requirements for disseminating the research to the public are well defined and clear. This does not change the fact that many researchers feel uncomfortable reaching out to journalists.
This course will give the participants an understanding of how journalists work, how to collaborate with them when communicating the research. It will give the participants tools to sharpen the key message of the story when pitching it to a journalist, and help defining the target groups and media selection.
Through exercises, plenary discussions, and individual homework, the participants will get hands on with different journalistic genres followed by feedback.
Proposed number of participants
12
The target group of the course is Ph.d. students within the natural science, medical field and life science disciplines. Researchers from other faculties are welcome to join, however lectures will primarily comprise examples from biomedical / natural scientific news in the media.
Qualifications / requirements / course preparation
Participants need to bring a case to the course. A case is defined as a story from the laboratory, the clinic, the hospital, or else – i.e. where the Ph.d. student is doing his / her research. During the course the cases will be used for practical exercises in journalistic communication. Mandatory pre-reading encloses a textbook written by the lecturer, Charlotte Strøm. The book will be provided by the course director as an e-book in English or Danish. If course participants prefer a hardcopy of the book, it can be purchased online or with the course director.
English: e-book ‘Why don't you get this?’ ISBN 978-87-994812-3-1 Printed book ‘Why don’t you get this’ ISBN 978-87-994812-4-8 or in Danish: e-bog ’Forstå dog, hvad jeg mener’ ISBN 978-87-994812-2-4 Trykt bog Forstå dog, hvad jeg mener’ ISBN 978-87-994812-1-7
Relevance to graduate programmes
The course is relevant to Ph.d. students from all graduate programmes at the Graduate School of Health and Medical Sciences, UCPH: All graduate programmes
Language
The entire course will be in English if required by non-Danish participants. In Danish: course, theory, practical cases, and group discussions. In English: presentations, slides, Q&As during exercises. Homework can be done in either English or Danish – by individual choice. Feedback will be provided in the same language.
Form Lectures (face-to-face classroom tuition), plenary discussions, practical exercises based on the students’ own cases, group work, mandatory homework, individual feedback of homework
Course director
Charlotte Strøm, MD, Ph.d., journalist, and author Founder and owner of SharPen – Medicine in Media cs@sharpen.dk
Teacher
Charlotte Strøm, Brief CV: Charlotte Strøm is a self-employed consultant since 2009, providing various communication services and training to life science stakeholders. She graduated as a medical doctor and holds a ph.d. in ophthalmology. She has worked for a number of years in the pharmaceutical industry. Simultaneously, she took a diploma in journalism and communication. Besides having published scientific articles, she has authored a long list of journalistic articles in healthcare and pharma magazines. Charlotte Strøm is the author of the non-fiction book Why don’t you get this (in Danish: Forstå dog, hvad jeg mener – guide til kommunikation og mediehåndtering for læger og forskere) about communication and handling the press as a physician or a scientist.
Dates
15 and 29 November 2019 both days hrs. 08:30-16:30
Course location
TBA
Registration
Registration deadline is 15 October 2019.
Note: All applicants are asked to submit invoice details in case of no-show, late cancellation or obligation to pay the course fee (typically non-PhD students). If you are a PhD student, your participation in the course must be in agreement with your principal supervisor.
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