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快活app faculty making an impact

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Author(s)

Renea Morris

Renea Morris

Renea.Morris@du.edu

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In Academics Going Public, the authors share some suggestions for how faculty can find their public voice. Equipping faculty with tools to be able to confidently share their research and scholarship publicly is the premise behind the Public Impact Fellows (PIF) program at 快活app. Welcoming the third cohort this fall, the University鈥檚 PIF program began as a 快活app Impact 2025 pilot initiative and operates as a partnership between the听Office of Research and Sponsored Programs听and MarComm. The group meets regularly over the course of the academic year to learn how to best use blogs, radio, television, op-eds, and social media to disseminate their expertise.

The faculty members in this year鈥檚 cohort represent nearly every college and school. Research听 focused on the wellbeing of children, including access to education, mental health resources, and the importance of caregiver relationships from childhood, and Covid-related research such as the ethics of vaccine distribution represent just a sample of the areas of interest within this group.

I had an opportunity to join the first session, which was a message workshop, entitled 鈥淚t鈥檚 Not What You Say, It鈥檚 What People Hear.鈥 I listened as the group learned the basics of 鈥渄efining their audience and crafting their message." The group received a primer on how public communication differs听from academic communication as well as how to craft and refine a message around research and expertise, how to identify audiences and adapt messages for different groups, and how to support a particular message through stories, statistics, and sound bites.

In a previous post I talked about the incredible efforts of the many faculty that are sharing their expertise with the media, even in the midst of a worldwide pandemic. The 快活app is fortunate to have a wide array of faculty engaged in far-reaching research鈥攅ncompassing everything from research on the death penalty, to immigration, to ethical considerations regarding the distribution of coronavirus supplies. What is common is that all are focused on the public good.