ScienceWriters Magazine, Summer/Fall 2021
Read the Summer/Fall 2021 issue of ScienceWriters magazine.
Read the Summer/Fall 2021 issue of ScienceWriters magazine.
Chantal Cough-Schulze, a communications specialist at the Texas Water Resources Institute and a new addition to the NASW community, shares #WhySciWri in this short Q&A.
If you’ve been watching the Olympics, you’ve seen torrents of sweat. Elite athletes sweat sooner and more copiously than couch-potatoes, Sarah Everts reports in The Joy of Sweat: The Strange Science of Perspiration. Their bodies anticipate and compensate for exercise-induced high core temperatures. Though “sticky, stinky, and gross,” Everts says, “sweat is among our most fascinating secretions.”
NASW is collaborating with the National Press Club Journalism Institute on a special webinar examining bias and representation in data.
Aug. 3, 2021
Twelve million years ago, rhinos, elephants, camels, and saber-toothed deer roamed the ancient savanna we now call Nebraska, gathering at watering holes. The explosion of a supervolcano in present-day Idaho 1,000 miles away sent a blanket of ash that buried hundreds of animals for millennia. In Rhinos in Nebraska, Alison Pearce Stevens tells the story of their discovery and continuing excavation.
We invite members to review and comment on recommendations from the Membership Committee and board to update the membership structure outlined in our bylaws. The goal of these recommendations is to provide for a more inclusive professional community and reflect changes in the field. The final recommendations will be put forward for a vote of the membership later this fall.
Jul. 14, 2021
NASW’s new Conflict of Interest Resource aims to inform science writers about behaviors or practices that may raise concerns and how to navigate them.