This year the MRS 2011 Fall Meeting will feature a variety of materials science topics. For general information regarding the MRS 2011 Fall Meeting: http://www.mrs.org/fall2011/
Some events of particular interest include:
The Materials Research Society is playing a major role in bringing the education and research communities together at the Fall Meeting. Join us for exciting hands-on activities, demonstrations, information areas, and seminars to engage future materials scientists and engineers. Join us at the Public Outreach Center at the 2011 MRS Fall Meeting in Boston and learn what roles MRS is playing in the following education outreach communities. Find out how you can participate and be part of the action as we bring the science of materials to the general public. The following activities will be represented at the Public Outreach Center: DBIS, Hands-On Nano Hours, Materials Voice, NISE Network/Nanodays, NOVA, Science on the Square, Strange Matter
Join us throughout the week during the coffee breaks as national science centers and science museums, in partnership with the NISE Network, present “stimulating” educational, outreach hands-on activities in materials science and nanotechnology
Created for general public audiences at the Museum of Science Boston, Cleaning Our Water with Nanotechnology is a presentation about our drinking water and how we can make contaminated water safe to drink by using a variety of technologies, including three new nanotechnologies for water purification. During the presentation, audiences consider the following questions:
Which contaminants do we have in our water that makes it unsafe to drink?
How do we typically purify our water – and what are the shortcomings/limitations of those technologies?
How can new nanotechnologies purify our drinking water in new ways to help us in situations where large-scale water treatment isn’t appropriate?
This activity is sponsored by NISE Network, the National Science Foundation and the Museum of Science Boston.
Presenters: Museum of Science, Boston, Museum of Life and Science, Sciencenter, Spoken Science
Sponsored by ACS Publications (Booth 125), The NISE Network and the National Science Foundation
The scientific process is not just about generating ideas; it is about freely sharing those ideas with the broader world. Now, more than ever, the ability to recruit students, attract colleagues, garner attention, and secure funding is tied to your ability to successfully communicate the results of your work, both to peers and to the general public. Communications expert Tim Miller has spent his career helping scientists and students bring their work out of the laboratory and share it with a wider audience. For a variety of reasons, communicating your research with nonexperts is an important skill. In this session, you will learn the fundamentals of sharing science as Miller explains how to choose the very best tools to do the job of communication, and reveals some of the tips and tricks that can help you take your scientific presentations to the next level.
This session is sponsored by the NISE Network and the National Science Foundation.
There is no better way for your research to reach a broad audience than through broadcast media. Films, television, radio, and the Internet provide a huge pipeline though which society can discover scientific research. Yet news departments worldwide continue to devote less reporting to topics in science, and the onus now falls on scientists to craft and deliver messages about their work that is suited for dissemination through these media channels.
This session is sponsored by the NISE Network and the National Science Foundation.
One of the mainstays of technical communication, the scientific poster offers a compact and powerful format for sharing your work with your peers. Yet, sometimes, even the most brilliant results can be obscured by poor layout or design. Communications expert Tim Miller will share the basic rules of good poster design and show you some of the most effective tools and techniques for creating technical posters with quality and clarity. Numerous examples of good and bad poster design will be critically reviewed. You will leave this session armed with the skills to guarantee that your next scientific poster will stand out in a crowd.
Presentations conducted by Tim Miller of Spoken Science
This session is sponsored by the NISE Network and the National Science Foundation.