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I was just reading through my friends page and came across the latest offering from Bad Astronomy, 'Scientists are...' (http://www.slate.com/blogs/bad_astronomy/2013/12/04/search_engine_bias_scientists_are.html). In this article Phil Plait is worrying about the bad rep scientists seem to have via Google search autocomplete.

Scientists being idiots, liberal and liars as the top three options listed. The perception of scientists and scientists perceptions of other peoples perceptions of scientists is a topic close to my heart as a scientist and a science communicator so I had some opinions on this article!

Granted, the options shown are not generally the most flattering but I wondered how other professions fared with the same test.

Teachers are overpaid and underpaid
Lawyers are liars, evil and crooks (no surprises there I guess...)
Authors are rockstars , dead and crazy, but also listed alphabetically
Chefs are arrogant and alcoholic
Actors are overpaid and stupid
Politicians are corrupt and liars
Footballers are awesome and overpaid
Sales people are scum and annoying
Mechanics are crooks and thieves
Police are useless and evil

I could go on, but you get the picture. Scientists are not alone in having their profession disparaged. Maybe it's because I interact with a lot of scientists that I see it more, but I do see a lot more complaining by scientists than other professions about how 'the public' sees them. In fact, after having carried out a study on 10 year old children and reading many other studies, I feel I can say with reasonable confidence say that most people think of scientists as people who work in science.

All professions have their stereotypes and the people in those professions are as diverse, character-wise, as any other arbitrary group.

I have mixed feelings on the promotion of science and scientists. On the one hand I think it is important for professions to be visible, so children can decide if they like them and so 'the public' can see how they affect them socially. On the other hand I don't think this persecution complex on the part of scientists is something that is at all helpful to be holding on to. Neither is the promotion of science as the perfect objective lens through which the world must be viewed. Science is important, but so is history and politics and law and all these other subjects. We are not one dimensional beings, nor is 'the public' a cohesive whole. Trying to treat people like that smacks of condescension which doesn't help anybody's cause at all.

This post is not meant as a complaint about Plait specifically, but his article is another in a long line of similar ones I have seen and pushed me to post my own thoughts on the matter. If anyone's still reading, you might like some more posts I have planned on children's perceptions of scientists. I have got my dissertation back and am now free to post it where I like so there will be some of the better extracts from it coming soon (when I am not too lazy). There will also be pictures drawn by the children, which are frankly the best part.

If anyone wants to join in with more professions do so in the comments!
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Last push for the masters is today! 4000 words to finish it, then the dissertation will be printed and bound and handed in tomorrow. Then the year will be done! Come on Kat you can do it!

edit: dissertation is done!

43,651 words, 214 pages, 47 pictures, 10 focus groups, 4 tables, 2 graphs and 1 interview. My summer's work.
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I have been emailing myself links from Twitter that I want to remember or read later, and have amassed quite a few over the last month or so, so I thought I'd organise them somewhere I can check back and look at them. They are a bit random but still interesting. If you want to know more about any of the articles, let me know in comments and I'll look into it (I'm supposed to anyway, but extra motivation never hurt anyone!)








Museum games: the kids are all right
Children won't just play anything, finds Ben Templeton, whose Science Museum exhibit is all the better for input from students


Short piece from the Guardian on exhibit design, showing young people are more self aware than we often give them credit for, and that asking someone is still the best way to find out what they're thinking.

It's been a marathon getting this vital libel reform bill through the Lords. Let's not shackle it to a contentious press regulation plan.

Bookmarked to read from the Guardian. Relevent to silencing of scientists in genuine critical inquiry via libel threats.
Bookmarked to read from Scientific American blogs. I see a lot of bad evo. psy. justifying horrible misathropic views. It would be nice to see something with actual evidence.
Host of microbes found in lake deep under Antarctica's ice sheet.

Bookmarked to read from Nature. Just thought it sounded interesting!
Bookmarked this to look at the interviews with Prof. Brian Cox and Dara O Briain, but at some point will hopefully get around to looking at ALL the lectures, podcasts etc. The Life Scientific is an awesome podcast interviewing a whole range of different scientists, which I am actually up to date with.
Bookmarked to read from Imperial College, and also to check out the links within. An interesting panel on science communication to look into.
Bookmarked to read from Yale. More science communication, replete with links to investigate.
Gender politics on BBC Radio 4. Also a reminder to find a copy of Wild Swans and re-read it. I read my Mum's copy may years ago when I was still a child and found it hard to get through and very moving. I suspect that won't have changed very much in the intervening years. Also I lost many hours of an afternoon to the EscherGirls tumblr


Polishing Rabbits an Passing Off Squirrels – Andrew Zolli on Jonah Lehrer
On storytelling in the media, some points to consider.


The trouble with 'science'
Why the words 'science' and 'scientist' can set alarm bells ringing: often misused or too general to be helpful

From the Guardian. Seeing the words 'scientists say' in an article often makes me groan and want to bash my head on the table as I know the following story will often be inaccurate, misunderstood or sensationalised out of all proportion. Which scientists? Who are they? I do appreciate, however, that it's a hard world that science journalists live in with the demands made by editors and news bosses to get content out. 'Science' covers such a huge range of topics, it's a nonsense to talk about it as if it were one big homogenous mass (I do admit I'm as guilty of this as anyone). It's something that needs thinking about, certainly.
Developers say C-Fast – developed from bomb detection technology – will revolutionise diagnosis of other diseases

(Guardian again) Argh! See links under headline:


Symposium on 'Credibility across cultures: expertise, uncertainty and the global politics of scientific advice'
Bookmarked to watch. Symposium on 'Credibility across cultures: expertise, uncertainty and the global politics of scientific advice' at Sussex University

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I couldn't let this page from my assigned reading pass without comment here...

From Understanding Popular Science by Peter Brok.

'However, if we do recognize the public creating its own popular science and we do accept it on its own terms, then we have a vision of popular science markedly different from that of science literacy surveys and PUS. This is clearly the case with a particular form of rewriting Star Trek known as 'slash fiction' - a form of pornography written by female fans in which the main characters of the series (Kirk/Spock, or K/S) are reimagined as lovers. For Penley, however, NASA/TREK is the kind of popular science we should aspire to.'

The context of this is that PUS (Public Understanding of Science) is a model of science communication that works by scientists trying to 'improve the public's knowledge deficiency' by telling them facts. This chapter acknowledges this is a poor model and that the public (surprise surprise!) have opinions and agency and aren't just empty vessels waiting to be filled with science.

On reading this passage my first act was to chuckle, and then want to find someone who has written NASA/Trek fiction. I feel sure that there must be some somewhere on the web.

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