The Center for Advancing Research Impacts in Society (ARIS) is pleased to announce Jacqueline Goldstein, MIT Communication Lab, is a fellowship award recipient.
As ARIS Fellows, Goldstein and Dione Rossiter, Executive Director, Science, University of California Berkeley, will work together on their project: The Integration of Inclusive SciComm Principles and Practice into Research Impacts
The 2022 class of ARIS Fellows includes one individual and six team fellowships, awarded at $5,000 and $7,500 respectively. The goal of the program is to increase the quality and availability of scholarship and resources about research impacts to improve design and practice.
“The ARIS community brings together professionals with a rich diversity of backgrounds and professional practices. The suite of 2022 Fellows projects reflects that diversity,” said Julie Risien, PhD, Associate Director of the STEM Research Center at Oregon State University and Co-Investigator of ARIS.
The 2022 Fellows will conduct collaborative research and synthesize available evidence to create tools and resources that support the research community to advance the quality of their research impacts work. Fellows work in coordination with each other and ARIS as they build their own professional capacities. Their projects will undergo external peer review and will be presented to the ARIS community at the Annual ARIS Summit and at other workshops delivered by ARIS and cooperating organizations.
Risien anticipates the 2022 Fellows will develop tools to support engagement and partnerships in the humanities, arts, design, and science policy; provide guidance for scalable inclusive science communication practice and integration of undergraduate education with broader impacts; and improve cyber security through media literacy.
Learn more about the 2022 Fellows and their projects on the ARIS website.