Category Archives: SO’09

ScienceOnline09 – an interview with Clinton Colmenares

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Here is the third interview in the series on Miss Baker’s Biology class blog – William’s interview with Clinton Colmenares.
Previously in this series:
ScienceOnline09 – an interview with…me!
ScienceOnline09 – an interview with Eric Roston

ScienceOnline09 – workshops

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Most sessions (see the Program) at ScienceOnline09 are supposed to be highly interactive – in the spirit of an Unconference, based on the idea that:

The sum of the expertise of the people in the audience is greater than the sum of expertise of the people on stage.

But, there will be a few exceptions. First, there will be several quick demos on Sunday morning.
But also, four of the sessions are meant to be more in a workshop mode, where we expect that the people on stage will actually have greater expertise than people in the audience and that the reason people will choose to attend these sessions will be to learn the skills they do not yet possess. But the audience should prepare nonetheless, at least by helping the session leaders by editing the session wiki-pages and adding questions and ideas. These sessions are:
Blogging101 – how to get started:
This session will be moderated by Pal,MD:

You have heard about blogs, perhaps read some blogs, have spent a whole day yesterday hearing about how great blogs are, so now you have finally decided to try to write one yourself. Bring your laptop and we’ll help you, step-by-step, start your own WordPress.com blog during this session.

Blogging102 – how to make your blog better:
This session is moderated by Roger Harris:

You have been blogging for a while, but want to make it better – we’ll help you choose and install applications and widgets, help you make your blog look better, be more functional and, hopefully, more popular.
What does it take to make your blog better?
Tell me what you want to know. Let’s get semantics out of the way. What do you mean by “better”? Prettier? Easier to navigate? More visibility in search engines? More relevant content?
Let’s discuss all these and more. What ideas do you have for our session?

How to paint your own blog images:
This how-to session is led by Jessica Palmer, Tatjana Jovanovic-Grove and Glendon Mellow:

Take this workshop by a couple of professional artists and get started on illustrating your blog with your own art.

Not just text – image, sound and video in peer-reviewed literature:
This session is moderated by Moshe Pritsker and Apryl Bailey:

Moving publishing from paper to the Web will change the format of the scientific paper. Things that are impossible to do in print are easy online. What are some of the first strides and what is the future of multimedia as an integral part of a scientific report?

ScienceOnline09 – an interview with Eric Roston

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The next in the series of interviews by Miss Baker’s high school biology class is the interview by Jordan with Eric Roston. Read the interview here.

ScienceOnline09 – an interview with…me!

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One of the education sessions at ScienceOnline09 will be the middle/high school perspective (or: “how the Facebook generation does it”?) session that will be led by Miss Baker and eight of her high-school biology class students.
One of these students – Brandon – recently interviewed me via e-mail and the interview is now available online – you can choose the full text or you can opt for excerpts in a video form. I understand that other students interviewed other conference participants and I can’t wait to see their interviews as well.
I see that Peter Suber already liked it 😉

ScienceOnline09 – show-and-tell

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While most of the sessions at ScienceOnline09 will be highly interactive, we have also planned for a Sunday morning series of demos, or “show-and-tell” sessions. This will be a series of short (12-15 minutes) demos of various websites, blogs, applications, programs, etc. We will try to record and post screencasts of these demos on the wiki as well.
The line-up is quite impressive:
* Corie Lok: Nature Network
* Erin Jonson: Scienceblogs.com
* Dave Munger – ResearchBlogging.org
* Apryl Bailey: SciVee.tv
* Moshe Pritsker: JoVE
* Victor Henning: Mendeley
* Antony Williams: ChemSpider
* Kevin Emamy: CiteULike
* Neeru Paharia: AcaWiki – a wiki of open-access long abstracts of peer-reviewed research
* Jean-Claude Bradley: Doing chemistry in Second Life
* Vedran Vucic: Blog aggregators for public health information in Serbia
* Sol Lederman – US Dept of Energy Office of Scientific and Technical Information – Powerful Resources for Scientists and Researchers. Discuss here.
* Roger Harris: how to put your story on a dozen networks, sites and services in 15 minutes or less.

ScienceOnline09 – On Reputation

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If you check out the Program of the ScienceOnline09 conference, you will notice that there will be three sessions that address, each from a different angle, the question of building and maintaining scientific authority and reputation online: in scientific papers, in comments on scientific papers, and on science blogs:
Reputation, authority and incentives. Or: How to get rid of the Impact Factor
This session is moderated by Peter Binfield and Bjoern Brembs:

Historically, there has been much use and misuse of Thomson Scientific’s (Thomson Reuters) Impact Factor (IF). Originally devised to rank journals according to the citations its articles draw, it has subsequently been misused to rank the authors publishing in these journals.
In this respect, the first question to be addressed would be as to whether we will need to rank journals in the future. In other words, should where something is published matter at all? If this question is answered with ‘YES’, what could be better criteria for objective journal rank?
Irrespective of how the initial question is answered, the next question is whether or not we need a per-publication assessment tool (which could then be aggregated for each scientist). In this discussion, the main message to be kept in mind is that there is no replacement for actually reading a scientist’s contributions. Should this be practically impossible or other important reasons preclude reading all relevant contributions, what new criteria would make the most sense for evaluating research and researchers?
Once we know what we want to replace the IF with, how would we go about replacing the de facto stranglehold the IF has on the major decision-making bodies in science? In other words, if we can agree on technically feasible, meaningful alternatives, what is the best way to popularize these methods and push the IF out of the marketplace?

Transitions – changing your online persona as your real life changes
This session is moderated by ScienceWoman and Propterdoc:

As you move from high school to college, then to grad school and postdoc, and finally get a job in academia or elsewhere, you leave your name (and thoughts and pictures) all over the Web. When you are blogging as a student or postdoc, your style and choice of topics probably reflects your position in the Academia. How do you change your blog once you get hired (without alienating your regular readers) so it works for you in your new position? How do you manage your online persona so what is out there on the Web about you reflects what you do at the moment and not the ‘shady’ past?

Anonymity, Pseudonymity – building reputation online
This session is moderated by PalMD and Abel. Pseudonymous women-in-science bloggers are also being tapped for leadership and input (please add to the wiki!):

There are good reasons for people in science and medicine, and especially women, to remain pseudonymous online. How does one build a reputation online, how does the process differ from the formal process of the academic world, and how the two worlds interract?
Discuss:
Ideas:
1) Types of identity: real name, pseudonymity, anonymity
2) Reasons
3) Particular issues of women-in-STEM bloggers
4) Pitfalls
5) Being outed: an inevitability
6) Are there responsibilities in writing with a pseudonym?

This last one has already provoked a vigorous discussion on various blogs. Check them out:
Terra Sigillata: The Pseudonymity Laboratory: Do you trust me?
Denialism blog: Why should I trust you?
DrugMonkey: Abel’s Excellent Pseudonymity Inquiry
Terra Sigillata: The Pseudonymity Laboratory: Up from the Comments
DrugMonkey: Pseudonymous Blogging Panel
Comrade PhysioProf: Not This Fucking Shit Again
Terra Sigillata: The Pseudonymity Laboratory: PhysioProf Provides Slide Number One
Pro-science: Blogging anonymously
Terra Sigillata: The Pseudonymity Laboratory: Does Formal Certification Increase Credibility?
DrugMonkey: On a Blogger’s Responsibility to Anonymous Commenters
Denialism blog: The ethics of blog anonymity
Adventures in Ethics and Science: Why would anybody want to blog under a pseudonym?
Terra Sigillata: The Pseudonymity Laboratory: On Threatened or Actual Outing
Sciencewomen: Pseudonymity doesn’t matter in the women in STEM blog community?

ScienceOnline09 – very, very international!

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Hmmm, let’s see who is coming from really far away, crossing borders and such…..
Richard Grant is coming from Sydney, Australia.
Chris Rowan is coming from Johannesburg, South Africa.
Paula Signorini is coming from Sao Paulo, Brasil.
Carlos Takeshi Hotta is coming from Sao Paulo, Brasil.
Vedran Vucic is coming from Belgrade, Serbia.
Danica Radovanovic is coming from Belgrade, Serbia.
Bjoern Brembs is coming from Berlin, Germany.
Diana Pauly is coming from Berlin, Germany.
Martin Fenner is coming from Hannover, Germany.
Bob O’Hara is coming from Helsinki, Finland.
Enrico Maria Balli is coming from Trieste, Italy.
Kevin Emamy is coming from London, UK.
Victor Henning is coming from London, UK.
Jennifer Rohn is coming from London, UK.
Katherine Haxton is coming from Stoke-on-Trent, UK.
Moheb Costandi is coming from London, UK.
Graham Steel is coming from Glasgow, Scotland, UK.
Karen James is coming from London, UK.
David Bradley is coming from Cambridge, UK.
Henry Gee is coming from Cromer, UK.
Daniel Cressey is coming from London, UK.
Glendon Mellow is coming from Toronto, Canada.
John Dupuis is coming from Toronto, Canada.
Sam Dupuis is coming from Toronto, Canada.
Eva Amsen is coming from Toronto, Canada.
The ScienceOnline09 is looking even more international than the previous two years!

ScienceOnline09 – Alternative Careers

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If you look at the Program carefully, you will see there are three sessions specifically addressing the question of alternative careers at the ScienceOnline09. Here they are:
How to become a (paid) science journalist: advice for bloggers – This session is moderated by Rebecca Skloot and Tom Levenson:

Bloggers are bloggers because they like to write. But writing a blog is not the same as writing for a newspaper or magazine (or radio or TV). Most science bloggers have a background in science, not journalism. So, how does one become a science journalist? We’ll ask some journalists for advice.

Alternative careers: how to become a journal editor – This session is moderated by Henry Gee (senior editor at Nature) and Peter Binfield (managing editor of PLoS ONE):

The leaky pipeline is a problem: many more people earn PhDs in science than there are tenure-track faculty positions. Alternative careers include government or corporate research, teaching, writing/journalism, etc. One attractive job for a young scientist is that of an editor of a scientific journal. But how do you become one? We’ll ask some editors for useful tips.

Blog-To-Book: You are a science blogger but you want to publish a pop-sci book? – This session is moderated by Tom Levenson and Dave Munger:

A number of bloggers have signed book deals recently. But how does one get such a deal? How should one adjust one’s blogging in order to become attractive to agents? Who to contact? How to write a proposal? How to write the book? And once it’s published, how to promote it online? We’ll ask some writers who are also bloggers, and some bloggers who snagged book deals, to share the secrets of getting a book published. Share your experiences as well.

ScienceOnline09 – UNC

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Among those registered for ScienceOnline09 are also a bunch of people associated with the University of North Carolina in Chapel Hill:
Paul Jones is a journalism professor and the founder of Ibiblio
Patric Lane is the Health and Science Editor at UNC-Chapel Hill News Services
Carolyn Kotlas is the Academic Outreach Consultant at UNC-Chapel Hill Information Technology Services
Jan McColm is in the Department of Genetics and the Managing Editor of Genetics in Medicine
Les Lang is the Director of Research Communications and Assistant Director of Public Affairs and Marketing in the Medical Center News Office
Clinton Colmenares is the National Media Strategist in the Medical Center News Office
Tom Hughes is the Managing Editor in the Medical Center News Office
Douglas Johnston is an instructor in the SPH Executive Masters Program
Denise Young is the Director of Education Programs at the UNC Morehead Planetarium and Science Center
Jay Heinz is a Multimedia Designer at the Morehead Planetarium and Science Center and writes on their blog
Amy Sayle is the Educator in the Adult Programs at the Morehead Planetarium and Science Center
Lynn Davis is the Instructional Designer at the Friday Center for Continuing Education
Christina Whittle is in the Department of Biology
Jeff Yeo is a graduate student in the Medical & Science Journalism Program.
Paul Medina is a postdoc in the Brenman lab.

ScienceOnline09 – interviews with last year’s participants

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Do you want to start getting hyped for the ScienceOnline09? You can start by (re)reading the interviews with some of the last year’s participants, many of whom will be coming again this year so you may want to get to know a little bit more about them in advance: SBC’08 Interviews.

ScienceOnline09 – blog coverage so far

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A Blog Around The Clock: Get your calendars…
A Blog Around The Clock: Will there be a Third Science Blogging Conference?
A Blog Around The Clock: ScienceOnline’09
A Blog Around The Clock: Submit your entries for the third Science Blogging Anthology
A Blog Around The Clock: ScienceOnline’09 – Registration is Open!
Confessions of a Science Librarian: ScienceOnline ’09
Laelaps: I’m going, are you?
The Beagle Project Blog: Registration open for ScienceOnline’09 and OpenLaboratory’08
Living the Scientific Life: ScienceOnline’09 Conference in North Carolina
Michael Nielsen: Biweekly links for 09/16/2008
Sea Grant: From Katie Mosher–Science Online 09
Nature Network Bloggers Unite forum: Registration for Science Online 2009 is now open
Fairer Science: It’s coming; it’s coming
Lab Life: Blogger Bonding, Step 2 – continued
49 percent: Random
Biochemicalsoul: Science Blogging Conference in Research Triangle Park, NC!
Catalogue of Organisms: Open Lab 2008
Deep Sea News: Science Online ’09
PODelation: Science Blogs
Lecturer Notes: ScienceOnline’09
Flying Trilobite: ScienceOnline’09
Mindshavings: Science Online ’09
A Blog Around The Clock: ScienceOnline’09 – be a sponsor
A Blog Around The Clock: ScienceOnline09 – how do you keep up with us?
A Blog Around The Clock:ScienceOnline09 – how can you help?
A Blog Around The Clock:ScienceOnline’09 – The Program
A Blog Around The Clock:100!
A Blog Around The Clock:SciBlings at ScienceOnline’09
A Blog Around The Clock:Nature Network bloggers at ScienceOnline’09
A Blog Around The Clock:ScienceOnline’09 – the Program
A Blog Around The Clock:ScienceOnline’09 – Demos
Terra Sigilatta: ScienceOnline’09: a special message to the pseudonymous blogger
Mind the Gap: In which you are encouraged to take note: OpenLab 2008
Using Blogs in Science Education: NSTA and Science Online ’09
Mistersugar: ScienceOnline’09
Panthera studentessa: Open Lab ’08 & Science Online ’09
CIT Blog: Register now for ScienceOnline
Pharma Strategy Blog: Are you going to ScienceOnline09?
Almost Diamonds: ScienceOnline’09
Counter Minds: Science Online 09′
UNC Health Care’s Weblog: Science blogging at its best
A Blog Around The Clock:ScienceOnline’09 – NIEHS
A Blog Around The Clock:ScienceOnline’09 – Education sessions
A Blog Around The Clock:ScienceOnline’09 – Duke University
Panda’s Thumb: OpenLab 2008 and ScienceOnline 2009
The OpenHelix Blog: Science Online meeting is filling fast!
Urban Science Adventures!: Science Online09 – Science Blogging Conference
Biology in Science Fiction: Science Online ’09: Science Fiction on Science Blogs
Digital Serendipities: ScienceOnline ’09 – exploring science on Web
A Blog Around The Clock:ScienceOnline’09 – individual session pages
A Blog Around The Clock:ScienceOnline’09 – a more complete list of registered SciBlings
Confessions of a Science Librarian: ScienceOnline ’09: Register while there’s still time!
Women in Science: Science Online ’09
Almost Diamonds: ScienceOnline’09 Update
Science After Sunclipse: ScienceOnline ’09 (Hey, It Rhymes)
Neurotopia 2.0: Morning updates
Highly Allochthonous: Some calls to arms
NOVA Geoblog: Cream, sugar or geoblogosphere?
A Blog Around The Clock:ScienceOnline’09 – some more individual session pages
A Blog Around The Clock:ScienceOnline’09 – travel, accommodation, food
A Blog Around The Clock:ScienceOnline09 – we are full!
A Blog Around The Clock:ScienceOnline09 – more individual session pages
Bjoern Brembs: Moderating the post-IF session at ScienceOnline’09
The Beagle Project Blog: The Atlantic coccoliths blog
Science Careers Blog: Science Bloggers to Convene, In Person
The Core Mechanic: Open Game Table: The 2008 Anthology of Role Playing Game Blogs
A Blog Around The Clock:ScienceOnline’09 – Nature Network bloggers
A Blog Around The Clock:ScienceOnline09 – even more individual session pages
A Blog Around The Clock:ScienceOnline09 – blogging from strange, crazy places!
Laelaps: What shall we talk about?
The End Of The Pier Show: Bloggerasmic
Terra Sigillata: The Pseudonymity Laboratory: Do you trust me?
Interdyscyplinarni humaniści: Science Bloggers to Convene, In Person
Skulls in the Stars: History of science at ScienceOnline ’09!
A Blog Around The Clock: ScienceOnline09 – Hey, You Can’t Say That!
Mistersugar: SCONC report
Flying Trilobite: Face the muses
Denialism blog: Why should I trust you?
DrugMonkey: Abel’s Excellent Pseudonymity Inquiry
Terra Sigillata: The Pseudonymity Laboratory: Up from the Comments
DrugMonkey: Pseudonymous Blogging Panel

ScienceOnline09 – Hey, You Can’t Say That!

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The registration is closed and the Program is pretty much finalized. Here is another session to consider: Hey, You Can’t Say That!
This session is moderated by Greg Laden, Rick MacPherson, Karen James, Craig McClain, Mark Powell and PZ Myers:

It’s tempting to think that what we contribute in our blogs is written with impunity. But what happens when readers react so negatively to your words that it can leverage pressure on you from your boss, peers, colleagues, or administration? What responsibility, if any, do bloggers owe to their “day job” in avoiding controversy (and vice versa)? Is it enough to say in your profile that “this blog is my personal space and does not reflect the views of my employer”? Is capitulating to pressure a failure or just savvy blogging? What are the rules, if any, to self-censorship? Should an employer have a policy or set of guidelines regarding staff’s personal & professional blogging (and other public and semi-public activities like Facebook)? And when does pseudonymous blogging become a necessity? Bring your own perspectives and experiences to a discussion that explores the ups and downs of science bloggers who navigate the stormy waters between free expression and reader/employer backlash.

ScienceOnline09 – blogging from strange, crazy places!

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Introducing another session: Blogging adventure: how to post from strange locations:
This is a panel discussion with Karen James, Talia Page, Anne-Marie Hodge, Vanessa Woods, Meredith Barrett, John McKay, Kevin Zelnio, Rick McPhearson and Craig McClain:

The stereotype is that bloggers write in their parents’ basements, wearing pajamas, covered with Cheetos dust. But some bloggers have done amazing feats of reporting from weird and far-away places. Do you intend to do something like that? What are the technological challenges – and solutions – and what are the pros and cons of blogging from the jungle, or Antarctica, from Mt.Everest, from a submarine, from a space-ship, from a research ship, from a sailboat, from a war zone, from a high-radiation zone, an ecological research station or a palaeontological dig? Share your experiences, ask questions, and collect tips for your next trip to a Crazy Place.

Check the rest of the Program as well.

ScienceOnline09 – even more individual session pages

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And here are some other sessions that you will be able to attend, either physically or virtually:
How to paint your own blog images
Hey, You Can’t Say That!
Web and the History of Science
Blogging102 – how to make your blog better
Nature blogging
Reputation, authority and incentives. Or: How to get rid of the Impact Factor
Blog-To-Book: You are a science blogger but you want to publish a pop-sci book?
Science blogging networks – what works, what does not?
Race in science – online and offline
Open Access publishing: present and future

ScienceOnline’09 – Nature Network bloggers

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Now that the registration is closed, I can update the list of Nature Network bloggers who have signed up to come to ScienceOnline09 – and a few of them will also be involved in leading sessions or giving demos:
Eva Amsen
Anna Kushnir
Corie Lok
Jennifer Rohn
Henry Gee
Bob O’Hara
Richard Grant
Martin Fenner

ScienceOnline09 – more individual session pages

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Now that the registration is closed (you can still get on the waitlist if you send an e-mail to info@scienceonline09.com), it’s time to start preparing for the sessions. Here are some more sessions you may be interested in:
Not just text – image, sound and video in peer-reviewed literature
Alternative careers: how to become a journal editor
Providing public health and medical information to all
Art and science — online and offline
Anonymity, Pseudonymity – building reputation online
Open Access in the networked world: experience of developing and transition countries
Social networking for scientists
Blog carnivals: why you should participate
Blogging101 – how to get started

ScienceOnline09 – we are full!

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Registration for ScienceOnline09 is now closed — we’ve hit our limit.
Send a message to info@scienceonline09.com to get your name on the waitlist as we expect some registered individuals to cancel closer to the event.
And if you cannot make it, we’ll try to make as many sessions as possible broadcast live so you can participate.

ScienceOnline’09 – travel, accommodation, food

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For all the information about travel, accommodation and food, check this page on the wiki. There, you will find the code you should use when reserving a room at Radisson.
Use this map to orient yourself or find alternate hotels, etc.
The directions to Sigma Xi are here.
Radisson will send a shuttle for you to pick you up at the airport if you ask them in advance. They will also run a shuttle between the hotel and Sigma Xi Center and take you back to the airport when needed.
Use that wiki page to find room-mates, to coordinate carpooling, etc.
The meals at the Center during the Conference are on us. Meals outside the Center are pay-your-own.
If you plan to arrive early, on Thursday, plan to join us for the Early Bird Dinner at Town Hall Grill – edit that page to add your name and to tell us if you need a ride.

ScienceOnline’09 – some more individual session pages

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The registration is almost full!
And the Program is shaping up quite nicely. Check out these sessions today:
How to become a (paid) science journalist: advice for bloggers
Gene Wiki and BioGPS: Web Tools for Annotation and Understanding of Gene Function
Gender in science — online and offline
Rhetoric of science: print vs. web
Open Notebook Science – how to do it right (if you should do it at all)
Online science for the kids (and parents)
Blogging adventure: how to post from strange locations

ScienceOnline’09 – a more complete list of registered SciBlings

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Since I last posted the list of SciBlings registered for the conference, it got bigger.
Dave and Greta Munger have signed up.
PZ Myers has registered.
Chris Rowan says he’s coming.
The newest SciBling John Wilbanks has registered.
Brian Switek will be there.
Grrrrl will be there.
Both SciCurious and Evil Monkey as well.
And Greg Laden.
And Janet, of course.
And Zuska and Tara.
James for sure.
And yes, Abel and Sheril and Dr.Pal.
Both Sciencewoman and Alice said they’re coming.
Mo will do his best to come across the pond.
[insert update:] And just under the wire, Blake Stacey just registered.
And in the sense that ‘once a SciBling always a Scibling’, the Deep Sea News guys, Craig McClain and Kevin Zelnio will also be there.
And I expect that some Overlords may show up….
And many of them will be involved in moderating various sessions – just check the Program.
And there may be some more – they just need to check their calendars and finances and register – so watch the growing registration list. And register yourself.

ScienceOnline’09 – individual session pages

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If you check out the Program, you’ll see that I have started making pages for individual sessions – just click on “Go here to discuss” next to each session. Over the next few days I will do this for all the sessions and the session leaders will use those pages in whichever ways they want. For now, I have made pages for these sessions – check them out:
Science Fiction on Science Blogs?
Science blogging without the blog?
Science online – middle/high school perspective (or: ‘how the Facebook generation does it’?)
Transitions – changing your online persona as your real life changes
Semantic web in science: how to build it, how to use it
Using the Web in teaching college science
How to search scientific literature

ScienceOnline’09 – Duke University

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Again, let me introduce a bunch of people who have registered to attend and participate in ScienceOnline09 in January. Today – folks associated with Duke University.
Anton Zuiker, one of the organizers of this conference, is a long-time blogger, the founder of BlogTogether.org, and manager of Internal Communications at Duke Medicine, which involved designing and running the Web-based Inside Duke Medicine as well as re-designing their print newsletter.
Andrea Novicki is the Academic Technology Consultant at the Center for Instructional Technology, Duke University Libraries.
Marsha Penner is a postdoc in the Department of Psychology & Neuroscience.
Karl Leif Bates is is the Manager of Research Communications at Duke University and the Editor of Duke Research
David Palange is a student and blogger in the Nicholas School of the Environment
Clinton Jenkins is an ecologist and researcher in the Pimm group at the Nicholas School of the Environment.
April L. MacKellar is a doctoral student in the Department of Biochemistry.
Constance Johnson is doing cool educational stuff in the School of Nursing.
Lenore Ramm works at Duke and is a prolific food blogger.
Carmen Yeung is part of the Real Oceans Project of The Nicholas Institute for Environmental Policy Solutions
Benjamin Landis is a student in Nicholas School of the Environment
Eugenia Tsamis is a doctoral student in Biochemistry
Kevin Zelnio writes on Deep Sea News and The Other 95% and just started working in the Duke Marine Lab.
Robyn Walker is the Communications Assistant at the Duke University Nicholas School of the Environment
Anthony So is the Director of The Program on Global Health and Technology Access at the Terry Sanford Institute of Public Policy
Heidi Koschwanez is a student at the Center for Biomolecular and Tissue Engineering
Tong Ren is a Ph.D student in the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, Pratt School of Engineering.
Mary Jane Gore is the Senior Science Writer for The Duke Medicine Office of News and Communications
Mollie Minear is a PhD student in the Program in Genetics and Genomics.
Yuanjie Jin is a graduate student in Biology.
Zakiya Whatley is a student in the Program in Genetics and Genomics
Kristian Lum is a student of Statistics.
Andrew Thaler is a PhD student in the Duke University Marine Lab
Erica Tsai is a doctoral student in the Department of Biology, the developer of PhyloGeoViz, and, as one of the leaders of WiSE is in charge of the Friday program at ScienceOnline09.
Do you want to meet them? Sure, it’s easy and free. Just register.

ScienceOnline’09 – Education sessions

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Today, instead of introducing people, I will introduce a session, or two or three.
Feedback from participants of the last two conferences indicated a lot of interest in sessions relevant to science educators at all levels. At both the 1st and the 2nd conference, we had one session on using blogs in the classroom. But this time, we want to heed the calls and provide, if possible, three such sessions, each targeting a somewhat different audience.
So, if you go to the conference wiki and check the Program page, you will see the following three sessions listed there:
Online science for the kids (and parents) — moderated by Janet Stemwedel:

Even little kids are online these days. They are curious about the world. What kind of scientific information is there on the Web that is suitable for the littlest ones? How does one find the good stuff? What works and what doesn’t for that age group? What can one do to add quality science material for kids and parents? How to write blog posts with little kids in mind?

And also:
Using the Web in teaching college science — moderated by Andrea Novicki and Brian Switek:

What are the strategies, methods and pitfalls of using the online technologies in science education in college? The importance of Open Access to primary research. The willingness of students to post on blogs. Text-messaging as communication. The problem of the “creepy treehouse”.

And finally – and I am really excited about this:
Science online – middle/high school perspective (or: “how the Facebook generation does it”?) — moderated by Stacey Baker and her students:

How does middle/high school science education differ from that in college? There are also institutional problems: a) Most US pub. school networks firewall out major sources of info, such as all of scienceblogs.com, all of blogspot.com, all of youtube, etc. A teacher who finds something on a blog can’t use it directly in classroom. b) Conceptually linked posts and comment threads, ads, external links, etc. are often inappropriate for PS K-12 settings (which is perhaps why ‘a’ is true). c) yet, some bloggers want to have some of their work used in this setting. Are the younger kids different from college students in their use of online tools? Many school are experimenting with new technologies but do not have a clear idea how to do it – did they ask the kids themselves for advice? If not, we’ll ask the students in this session.

And if you look at the list of registered participants so far, you will see quite a lot of teachers and education specialists, as well as a few high school and college students, e.g., Kim Gainer and her duaghter Patti, John Dupuis’ son Sam, Elissa Hoffman and a number of others. We are also expecting some teachers and students from the Zoo School and from the Duke’s summer student research blogging program. Keep checking the wiki for more information….

ScienceOnline’09 – NIEHS

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I said I was going to introduce the participants at ScienceOnline09 in non-daily but larger batches. So, today, I introduce a large contingent of people coming from the National Institute of Environemental Health Sciences (NIEHS):
NIEHS News Director Robin Mackar
Web Manager Cheryl Thompson
Biomedical Librarian Stephanie Holmgren
Signal Transduction researcher Ren Rongqin
Signal Transduction researcher Danielle Duma
Signal Transduction researcher Daniel Brown
Signal Transduction researcher Erica Lannan
Blood-Brain Barrier researcher Brian Hawkins
And Pediatric Epidemiology researcher Yang Cao

ScienceOnline’09 – Demos

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There are now 142 people registered and the Program is becoming more and more impressive by the hour!
If you have a cool website, software or application that you would like to showcase, add your name to the Demo page – all the demos will be screencast and posted on the site, with links to you – easy PR for you.
But first, you need to register.

ScienceOnline’09 – the Program

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We now have 120 people registered for the conference – check them out. Then register.
And, we placed the first, tentative rough draft of the schedule on the Program page – go take a look.
Only 4-5 of the sessions are completely set in stone right now. For the others, names of session leaders may still change, some sessions may be replaced by others, etc. We are still working on it, talking with lots of potential session leaders.
The titles and descriptions are also provisional – as the session leaders think about it and start preparing, they will make the necessary changes.
Once more of the sessions are ‘fixed’ I will make a wiki page for each individual session for planning and discussions.
Thus, you can still chime in – suggest sessions (or changes to existing ones), discuss the sessions, volunteer to lead one, etc, on this page.
Also, if you want to do a demo of your website or software, you can add your name here

Nature Network bloggers at ScienceOnline’09

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Nature Network will be much better represented this year than last year, I am happy to report. This early in the game, we already have four registrants, coming from four different countries and making our meeting very international!
Anna Kushnir came last year. This year, it is Dr.Anna Kushnir who is coming back.
Martin Fenner is coming from Germany.
Bob O’Hara will travel from Finland.
And Richard Grant is coming all the way from Australia.
See who else is registered so far. Then register yourself.

SciBlings at ScienceOnline’09

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You may remember how last two years I introduced all registrants for the blogging conferences, 2-3 people per day. I decided this year to do it less often, but to introduce more people in each post. Let me start with an easy group to gather – my Sciblings:
Brian will be there.
Grrrrl will be there.
Both SciCurious and Evil Monkey as well.
And Greg Laden.
And Janet, of course.
And Zuska and Tara.
James for sure.
And yes, Abel and Sheril and Dr.Pal.
Both Sciencewoman and Alice said they’re coming.
Mo will do his best to come across the pond.
And there are probably going to be more – they just need to check their calendars and finances and register – so watch the growing registration list. And register yourself.

100!

This morning, the 100th person registered for ScienceOnline’09. That is about half the capacity of Sigma Xi. We got there fast! Don’t waver and wait too long – this may fill up sooner than expected!

ScienceOnline’09 – The Program

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With almost a hundred people already signed up for ScienceOnline’09, we are busily working on the Program.
But we do not want to force a program on you – we want you to help design the program that you will enjoy and find useful. We need you to look at the Program page and tell us what you think and what you offer to do. You can e-mail me or you can edit the Program page and add your name next to one of the suggested topics or add a new topic on the bottom.
Keep in mind that this is the Third conference. While it needs to cover some of the basics (e.g., “Why blog?” or “What is Open Access?”) for the people who are coming for the first time, most of the program should go beyond the basics and not be just a repeat of the sessions we had the past two years.
Analyzing your feedback after the last two conferences provided us with incentives to do things that many people asked for:
First, doubling the duration of the meeting – which does not mean we’ll get double the funding (unless you helps us with sponsorship) so we have to be frugal and carefully allocate the funds.
Second, having more sessions devoted to the educational aspects.
Third, trying to have all sessions live-streamed or recorded.
Fourth, do the “Blogging 101” session on site, during the conference, as it is difficult to go all the way to UNC for it the day before. Sigma Xi, the hotel and the airport are very close to each other, but venturing outside that small area requires us to take care of transportation, which can be costly (unless we get enough locals to volunteer to drive).
So, on Thursday, January 15th, some locals and any visitors already in town are invited to join us for the Early Bird Dinner (Place and time TBD.).
On Friday, January 16th, we will have, as we did last year, Science lab and museum tours in the morning. We’ll arrange for groups of 5-10 conference attendees to visit local science labs to get an introduction to the research and resources at that particular lab, or to one of the local science/nature museums. We’ll have a sign-up sheet up soon, as soon as we finalize the deals with all the local participating labs and museums.
In addition, for those who prefer food to science (or prefer to combine the two), and knowing that the Triangle is quite a ‘foodie’ place, we will have some tours of the local eateries, coffee shops and wine shops and agricultural science places. As soon as we finalize those deals, you will be able to sign up for them as well.
In the afternoon and evening, we will gather at Sigma Xi. The Friday will be sponsored and organized by Duke WiSE. It will start with the Women in Science & Engineering networking dinner, followed by the Keynote Address by a prominent woman science communicator.
Saturday, January 17th is the Big Day! We will have break-out sessions all day (with breaks for lunch and then a dinner at the end). Sessions will be 70 minutes long and there will be four sessions going on simultaneously.
We would prefer most of the sessions to be in an “unconference” format, predicated on the assumption that all the people in the room (people ‘formerly known as audience’) will collectively have more knowledge about the subject than the ‘expert’ at the head of the room. The role of the session leader is to introduce the subject, set the limits and goals, engage the audience in discussion, prevent any single individual from ‘hogging’ the conversation, and preventing the discussion from veering too far and too long off on tangents. So, if the session leader ends up talking for an hour, you are doing it wrong 😉
We will have four tracks:
1. science/health/nature blogging
2. science communication and education
3. doing and publishing science
4. show-and-tell quick sessions (these will be 15 minutes long and in a presentation/demo format).
Each track will have sessions targeting different audiences (e.g., beginner bloggers, experienced bloggers, scientists, students, teachers, journalists, etc.).
The program, in the same format, will continue on Sunday, January 18th, until 2pm (we may plan some interesting kind of lunch for the end).
We have already been in touch with a number of potential leaders who contacted us. Go to the Program page (which does not reflect everything we are negotiating right now, but will soon) check out the proposed topics and add your name to one you would like to lead, or add a new idea at the bottom. Discuss the topics and descriptions there. Topics that appear to garner the most interest are more likely to be picked (there is just not enough time and space to have them all!).
As some of the sessions get “fixed in stone” I will edit the Program page to reflect this. In the meantime, we are all ears – we want to hear what you want. And we’ll work with you to make it happen.

ScienceOnline09 – how can you help?

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As the conference has grown from one to almost three days, and already more then 90 people have registered, we need your help – so offer to volunteer. What can you do?
* Spread the word: use online and offline tools to tell your friends about the conference
* Ask your company/organization to become a sponsor
* Donate a small amount of money
* Help us develop the Program and offer to lead a session
* Volunteer to collect and pack swag
* Volunteer to drive the out-of-town guests during the conference
* Volunteer to spend some time at the desk at the entrance, distributing name-tags, helping people get oriented….
* Some other way — tell us by editing this wiki page.

ScienceOnline09 – how do you keep up with us?

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During the months of preparation, as well as during the event itself, your starting point, for sure, is the ScienceOnline’09 wiki – you can always check the “Recent Changes” button, or watch as the Blog and Media Coverage page grows.
You can also check the news on the ScienceOnline09 blog.
You can come here and check the posts in my SO’09 category.
You can join the Facebook Event and watch the wall there (and invite your friends there as well).
Or you can join the FriendFeed room and discuss the event there.

ScienceOnline’09 – be a sponsor

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Are you or your company/organization in a position to sponsor the conference? It is organized and run by volunteers, registration is free, but putting this together still takes some money and effort. For this, we rely on our sponsors and volunteers.
There are several ways that you can sponsor the event:
Provide a grant
Cash grants provide us funds to pay for discussion leaders’ travel and lodging, travel grants for students, tote bags and t-shirts (see below), wifi tech support, meals and refreshments, meeting supplies and more.
Publicity
Display ads placed in your magazine or newsletter, on your blog or through your network help us to spread the word about the conference.
Swag for the grab bag
Your donation of magazines, books, DVDs and other scientific reference materials will fill the tote bags that we will give to all attendees. Why give away dead-tree materials at a conference about science online? Because we want our attendees to take these materials back to the classrooms, libraries and living rooms in their communities.
Participate
Your attendance at the conference adds to the wonderful gathering of smart, talented, interesting people. We know we have a lot to learn from you, so please plan to attend the conference. And help us build the Conference Program.
All our sponsors get the satisfaction of supporting an event that promotes the public understanding of science. You also get our link-love — we’ll plaster your logo on the conference wiki and materials and link to you from our many blogs.
If you want to help, sign up here.

ScienceOnline’09 – Wow! Again.

Just six days after we opened registration for ScienceOnline’09 there are already 52 registrants!
And some more people are blogging about it:
49 percent: Random
Biochemicalsoul: Science Blogging Conference in Research Triangle Park, NC!
Catalogue of Organisms: Open Lab 2008
Deep Sea News: Science Online ’09
PODelation: Science Blogs
Lecturer Notes: ScienceOnline’09
Flying Trilobite: ScienceOnline’09

ScienceOnline’09 – Wow!

Just two days after we opened registration for ScienceOnline’09 there are already 32 registrants!
And some people are blogging about it:
A Blog Around The Clock: Get your calendars…
A Blog Around The Clock: Will there be a Third Science Blogging Conference?
A Blog Around The Clock: ScienceOnline’09
A Blog Around The Clock: Submit your entries for the third Science Blogging Anthology
A Blog Around The Clock: ScienceOnline’09 – Registration is Open!
Confessions of a Science Librarian: ScienceOnline ’09
Laelaps: I’m going, are you?
The Beagle Project Blog: Registration open for ScienceOnline’09 and OpenLaboratory’08
Living the Scientific Life: ScienceOnline’09 Conference in North Carolina
Michael Nielsen: Biweekly links for 09/16/2008
Sea Grant: From Katie Mosher–Science Online 09
Nature Network Bloggers Unite forum: Registration for Science Online 2009 is now open
Fairer Science: It’s coming; it’s coming
Lab Life: Blogger Bonding, Step 2 – continued

ScienceOnline’09 – Registration is Open!

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First, there was the First NC Science Blogging Conference. Then, there was the Second NC Science Blogging Conference. And yes, we will have the Third one – renamed ScienceOnline’09 to better reflect the scope of the meeting: this time bigger and better than ever.
ScienceOnline’09 will be held Jan. 16-18, 2009 at the Sigma Xi Center in Research Triangle Park, NC.
Please join us for this free three-day event to explore science on the Web. Our goal is to bring together scientists, bloggers, educators, students, journalists, writers, publishers, Web developers and others to discuss, demonstrate and debate online strategies and tools for promoting the public understanding of science.
The conference is organized jointly by BlogTogether, the North Carolina bloggers’ group, and WiSE @ Duke, the Women in Science and Engineering organization at Duke University, with help from Sigma Xi and other sponsors.
The people behind the organization are Anton Zuiker, Abel Pharmboy and myself, with additional generous help by Brian Russell and Paul Jones.
The conference homepage/wiki is now live! Go and explore!
Registration is free and it is now open – go and Register right now!
See who has already registered.
Help us develop the Program.
Perhaps your organization/company would like to be a sponsor? Or you’d like to volunteer?
Just like last two times, we are preparing the publication of the Science Blogging Anthology and, this time, we’ll try to really have it ready and up for sale at the conference itself. This year’s Guest Editor is Jennifer Rohn and you should really start submitting your entries now.
For news and updates about the conference (and anthology), follow the ScienceOnline09 blog or check here, my SO’09 category.
Hope to see many of you in January!

Submit your entries for the third Science Blogging Anthology

Two years ago, when we all got together and did this, the result was this.
Last year, when even more of us got together and did this, the result was this.
Now, with the new editor, we are ready to do this again!
The Open Laboratory 2008 is in the works. The submissions have been trickling in all year, but it is time now to dig through your Archives for your best posts since December 20th 2007 and submit them. Submit one, or two, or several – no problem. Or ask your readers to submit for you.
Then take a look at your favourite bloggers and pick some of their best posts – don’t worry, we can deal with duplicate entries. Do not forget new and up-coming blogs – they may not know about the anthology – and submit their stuff as well.
And help us spread the word by embedding these buttons on your blogs and websites – clicking on them takes you to the submission form:
<a href=”http://openlab.wufoo.com/forms/submission-form/”&gt<img src=”http://scit.us/openlab/openlab08-submit.150.png”&gt</a&gt

<a href=”http://openlab.wufoo.com/forms/submission-form/”&gt<img src=”http://scit.us/openlab/openlab08-submit.200.png”&gt</a&gt

<a href=”http://openlab.wufoo.com/forms/submission-form/”&gt<img src=”http://scit.us/openlab/openlab08-submit.300.png”&gt</a&gt

Organizing a conference

Why don’t *You* organize a conference?

A scientist should behave as a good citizen in the scientific community. You cannot expect that other colleagues perform all the unpleasant jobs and that you can spent all your time on science. I am referring to low-reward activities like reviewing papers, reviewing grant proposals, sitting on review panels, being an editor of a scientific journal, sitting on program committees and – which is the subject of my present post – really organizing a conference.
—————————-
My Advice
Try to stay away from organizing a conference. I have always been quite successful in not organizing them.

Ha! I organized two. And am in the midst of organizing the third. And it is not bad at all!

Sciblog2008

The London Science Blogging Conference now has a Facebook page for discussions. Perhaps they will also have a FriendFeed room, like the BioBarCamp folks did – it was fascinating following the meeting from afar there these two days.
In the meantime, we had a secret meeting about, well, providing some neat surprises for you for the ScienceOnline’09 meeting (a.k.a., the Third Science Blogging Conference), bigger and better than ever – the website and wiki will be up in about ten days or so, watch this space for updates….

ScienceOnline’09

The websites/wikis of the first two conferences appear to be down. We will move all of those archives to a new site soon, and very soon the website for the third ScienceOnline conference (formerly known as Science Blogging Conference) will be filled with more information. But for now, you can start using the brand new logo if you want to advertise the event:
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Will there be a Third Science Blogging Conference?

You bet there will be! But it will have a different name. Anton and I met yesterday afternoon (and the whole committee will meet in a couple of weeks), looked at all the feedback we got from the last meeting and started planning for the next one.
So, the third conference will be called ScienceOnline’09 (the new website will be up in a couple of weeks at scienceonline09.com, as well as a new, more reliable wiki). You will still be able to get to it from the scienceblogging.com page in the future.
The new name reflects the broader perspective of the meeting. Neither the first nor the second meeting was, and we surely do not want the third one to be, focused entirely on science blogging, but on everything people can do to use the Internet to do, teach, publish and communicate science.
The ScienceOnline’09 will meet from mid-day Friday, January 16th through mid-day Sunday January 18th, 2009. at Sigma Xi and in a couple of weeks we will start asking you to help us shape the program. Stay tuned….

Get your calendars…

…and block off two days: from mid-day Friday, January 16th through mid-day Sunday January 18th, 2009.
You will be too busy to do anything else because you will be in North Carolina, at Sigma Xi, attending the Third Conference….