Japan

What are Western journalists looking for in Japanese science?

Come to a forum at the Science Agora 2016 in Japan, on Saturday 5 November. Find out what turns science into news and how to pitch your stories to Western media – register here.

And we\’ll be presenting some of our stories at our booth at Science Agora in Japan on Saturday 5 and Sunday 6 November.

We\’ve also created a series of fact sheets highlighting Australia-Japan collaborations.

We will be in Tokyo for a week, so if you can’t make it to the Agora, but you’re interested in having a chat, please get in touch with us by email niall@scienceinpublic.com.au or phone +61 3 9398 1416.

Science as news: what are Western journalists looking for in Japanese science?

Symposium at Science Agora Festival 2016 (English language session)

Saturday 5 November, 1.30 pm to 3.30 pm

Meeting room #1, 4th floor of Tokyo International Exchange Center, 2 Chome-2-1 Aomi

What turns science into news? What makes a science story international? What are the BBC, New York Times, PBS, The Economist, and other international media really looking for in a science story?

This symposium will give Japanese scientists and policy makers guidance on how to get their stories into the mass media in Western countries.

The session will include practical advice from working journalists and science communicators about how scientists and organisations can pitch their stories to Western TV, radio, print, and online publications.

A free forum open to all.

Please register for this symposium here.

Further information

Over the two-hour session, we’ll facilitate a forum with foreign correspondents and science reporters who will tell the participants what they (and their audience) look for in a story. We will also provide advice to the attendees about how they can make their story work for Western media.

This session will be presented by Mr Niall Byrne from Science in Public, the Australian-based science communication agency. The Science in Public team have helped scientists bring their science stories to national and international attention including the loss of half the coral cover on the Great Barrier Reef; the world’s first printed jet engine; and the Higgs boson discovery. They also organised the World Congress of Science Journalists in Melbourne in 2007.

Science as news: what are Western journalists looking for in Japanese science?

Symposium at Science Agora in Japan 

11 am to 12.30 pm, Sunday 15 November, 7th Floor, Miraikan

(English language session)

What turns science into news? What makes a science story international? What are the BBC, New York Times, PBS, The Economist and other international media really looking for in a science story?

This symposium will give Japanese scientists and policy makers guidance on how to get their stories into the mass media in Western countries.

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