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Dynamic framing in the communication of scientific research: texts and interactions

Davis, Pryce; Russ, Rosemary S.

Authors

PRYCE DAVIS PRYCE.DAVIS@NOTTINGHAM.AC.UK
Assistant Professor in Learning Sciences

Rosemary S. Russ



Abstract

The fields of science education and science communication share the overarching goal of helping non-experts and non-members of the professional science community develop knowledge of the content and processes of scientific research. However, the specific audiences, methods, and aims employed in the two fields have evolved quite differently and as a result, the two fields rarely share findings and theory. Despite this lack of crosstalk, one theoretical construct—framing—has shown substantial analytic power for researchers in both fields. Specifically, both fields have productively made use of the fact that when people approach situations or texts in the world, they do so with a sense of “what is going on here” that guides their actions and sense-making in that situation. In this article, we examine the dynamics of how interactions between scientists, reporters, members of the general public, and various texts give rise to in-the-moment frames that shape each actors interpretation of scientific research. In doing so we couple science communication literature's focus on framings within and across texts with science education's focus on dynamic framing in interactions. We present a case study that follows a single piece of scientific research from scientist to reporter to the general public. Through semi-structured clinical interviews, video-based observation, and qualitative content analysis, we demonstrate that changes in science knowledge as it moves along the pathways of science communication are the aggregate result of dynamic moment-to-moment framings dispersed over people and interactions. The complexity and nuance of the story presented here have implications for how each field—science communication and science education—conceptualizes the process by which the public comes to knowledge of science.

Citation

Davis, P., & Russ, R. S. (2015). Dynamic framing in the communication of scientific research: texts and interactions. Journal of Research in Science Teaching, 52(2), https://doi.org/10.1002/tea.21189

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Nov 4, 2014
Publication Date Jan 24, 2015
Deposit Date Sep 15, 2017
Journal Journal of Research in Science Teaching
Print ISSN 0022-4308
Electronic ISSN 1098-2736
Publisher Wiley
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 52
Issue 2
DOI https://doi.org/10.1002/tea.21189
Keywords Framing; Informal learning; Interaction analysis; Popular science texts
Public URL https://nottingham-repository.worktribe.com/output/742691
Publisher URL http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/tea.21189/full