Inducing change
Other scholars have also been actively engaged in addressing real, pressing issues.
In September, Nadia Naffi (a PhD candidate in Educational Technology) organized a three-day workshop on using social media for Creating Learning Against Radicalization (CLEAR), a first-time initiative presented at the 3rd International Symposium on Teaching about Extremism, Terror and Trauma.
Alexander McClelland focuses on the legal implications of HIV non-disclosure among people living with HIV. He has been approached by policy advisors from Canada’s Department of Justice to use outcomes from his dissertation to inform current efforts to reform the way the law is applied. His op-ed on the right to research confidentiality was published in The Montreal Gazette earlier this summer.
And Leanne Keddie, a PhD candidate in Business Administration, was named among the latest recipients of the Canadian Foundation for Governance Research (CFGR) scholarships. Each year, these scholarships are awarded to the most promising doctoral students undertaking corporate governance research.
Both researchers and communicators
“Some people are researchers, and others communicators. We’re trained to be both,” says William Robinson, a Humanities PhD candidate whose research is at the crossroads of game studies, cultural studies and communications.
Robinson was recently part of a collaborative project called Place des Alts, an immersive narrative experience set in Montreal’s Quartier des spectacles. He says he’s learned a lot about how to present his work for public consumption.
“It’s not always easy to simplify what you’ve been working so hard on,” he says. “There’s a big difference between the expectations of academics in your field of study and those of the general public, who is nowhere close to being as interested in your topic as you are.”
Of the public scholar adventure, Robinson says: “The program is very demanding, but you do get a whole lot of value out of it.”
The inaugural public scholars hold their positions until May 2018.
Find out how you can join the next cohort of Concordia’s Public Scholars Program. The deadline for applications is 5 p.m. on Monday, November 20.