Print

Print


http://tinyurl.com/cls6vea
April 9, 2012
A Celebration of Science With a Popular Touch
By KAREN WEINTRAUB

CAMBRIDGE, Mass. - With the applause just winding down for a scantily 
clad all-girl rock band, John Durant climbed onstage, carrying his 
2-year-old son.

His assistants handed out cardboard placards emblazoned with "X" or 
"Y." Dr. Durant asked the women in the crowd to hold up an X, the men 
to hold up a Y.

Their letters, Dr. Durant told them, marked the tail end of a 
two-mile-long scale model of the human genome that stretched from the 
Massachusetts Institute of Technology to the stage in Harvard Square. 
They cheered as they became the symbolic 23rd chromosome, the one 
that determines sex.

That was at the inaugural Cambridge Science Festival, in 2007; this 
year's - the sixth - begins April 20. And if the science festival can 
be said to have an animating spirit, Dr. Durant - whose day job is 
director of the M.I.T. Museum - would be a good candidate.

He is 61, an evangelical minister's son from England who strikes a 
ramrod posture, favors pressed Oxford shirts and speaks with a BBC 
accent that gives little hint of his boyhood in a subsidized housing 
project in Norwich. Like his father, he devotes much of his life to 
spreading the gospel - in his case the gospel of science festivals.

Thanks in good part to Dr. Durant's advocacy, more than 20 science 
festivals were held across the United States last year, in science 
hubs like the Bay Area and in communities not known for their 
science, like Dayton, Ohio, and Colorado Springs.

He bristles when asked if a science festival is the same as a science 
fair. His answer is definitely no - although, he hastens to add, 
there's nothing wrong with science fairs, which typically challenge 
students to design and conduct their own experiments.

A science festival has more in common with a film, art or food 
festival. Festivals aim to bring in tourism dollars, introduce people 
to scientists and demystify science in an era when researchers and 
large sectors of the public diverge on major policy issues like 
climate change, vaccines and embryonic stem cell research.

"People are living with tensions between what they think about 
science in one area and what they believe in another," Dr. Durant 
said. Science festivals help bridge those gaps. "We shouldn't just be 
trying to shove science down people's throats. It never works and 
it's very uncongenial."

Each science festival capitalizes on regional strengths, expertise 
and creativity. But their underlying idea is the same: Bring as many 
people as possible into contact with science.

Two years after inaugurating the Cambridge Science Festival, Dr. 
Durant won a $3 million grant from the National Science Foundation to 
set up an alliance that would help start four festivals and inspire a 
few more. The Science Festival Alliance, based at the M.I.T. Museum, 
now expects more than 30 festivals next year, and sparked the first 
such festival in Egypt; it begins in Cairo on April 21.

Dr. Durant says the growth of science festivals is part of decades of 
efforts by him and others to integrate science and popular culture. 
In his early days, he said, he and his friends felt like missionaries.

"Today, it's pretty mainstream," he said. "I don't feel anymore that 
I'm in a minority of ridiculously evangelical advocates."

Dr. Durant's success stems only partly from his charm. He also sweeps 
people up with enthusiasm and idealistic vigor.

"He's smart enough to use that British accent and style to his 
advantage to make the science more fun," said P. A. d'Arbeloff, 
director of the Cambridge Science Festival. "He'll make a joke about 
the way he phrases things or a term that he uses," she said. "He'll 
phrase it in such a British way that he'll pull you in - it's 
disarming."

After his modest upbringing, he earned a full scholarship to 
Cambridge University, where he went on to earn a Ph.D. in the history 
of science - driven to answer questions raised by his father's 
religious convictions. As a graduate student in the early 1970s, Dr. 
Durant was disappointed that the talk on campus so quickly turned 
from the radicalism of the '60s back to more capitalistic concerns. 
He didn't enjoy teaching undergraduates, for whom learning was often 
only a means to an end.

As the most junior member of the History of Science department, Dr. 
Durant was asked to teach a continuing education class to adults in a 
nearby town - an assignment none of his colleagues wanted. But he 
found it so exhilarating, he pursued continuing education, rather 
than an academic career.

"I've always found that talking about science to people who are not 
specialists - who have a general interest and are prepared to ask any 
and every question that occurs to them - really compellingly 
interesting," he said.

By 1990, he was working at the Science Museum in London, which he 
thought overemphasized the past. There were too many exhibits about 
the steam age and not any about science in contemporary London, Dr. 
Durant said.

"It seemed not to engage anywhere with anything that visitors might 
be directly encountering or experiencing to do with science in their 
daily lives," he says now. "I've spent quite a bit of time in my 
museum career trying to think about what it means to do something 
realistically in the museum environment which isn't exclusively about 
the remote past."

There's a bit of unspoken rivalry between the World Science Festival 
in New York City and Cambridge's festival. Cambridge held the first, 
in 2007, as Dr. Durant points out; but New York had started planning 
its 2008 festival even earlier, as the World Science Festival founder 
and director, the physicist Brian Greene, retorts. The men have met 
only in passing, and each is far too gentlemanly to speak ill of the 
other, though each clearly favors his own formula.

"Our focus is on creating very high quality, highly artistically 
produced programs that bring together worlds that usually don't talk 
to each other," said Dr. Greene, a physics and math professor at 
Columbia and well-known popularizer of science. "We've tried to 
inject the drama of science into these highly produced programs, so 
people leave the event saying, 'Wow, I didn't know that's what 
science is like.' "

Many events for the New York festival, which this year runs from May 
30 to June 3, charge fees and sell out quickly. Organizers expect 
300,000 people to attend this year.

The Cambridge Science Festival cost $400,000 last year, with support 
from corporate donors, M.I.T., Harvard University and the state and 
local governments. About 50,000 people attended the festival, which 
aims for a more economically diverse audience, with most events free, 
and a somewhat lighter tone.

The most popular adult event in recent years has been Big Ideas for 
Busy People. Ten of the region's exciting thinkers, in just five 
minutes each, explain their big ideas. They then take five more 
minutes to answer questions. The free event was so packed last year 
that Dr. Durant's staff found a bigger venue for this year.

Other science festivals have largely followed Cambridge's model, 
because their regions lack New York's celebrity firepower and large 
audience. Last April, Philadelphia's first festival teamed up 
historians of science with comedians. They re-enacted famous 
scientific flops. In North Carolina, the inaugural festival in 2010 
featured the science of winemaking, a rap guide to evolution and a 
science carnival for children - the one feature common to festivals 
nationwide.

Dr. Durant wants to push beyond the constraints of a single, 10-day 
annual festival. He is extending the festival's outreach across 
Massachusetts and to an ever more diverse audience. At the Caribbean 
Festival in Boston in the fall, science festival staff handed out 800 
backpacks and experiments in two hours.

"It's important that we don't only celebrate science where it's 
already flourishing," Dr. Durant said.

**********************************************************************
Further information about the psci-com discussion list, including list archive, can be found at the list web site: http://www.jiscmail.ac.uk/lists/psci-com.html
You may also change your settings and subscribe/unsubscribe to psci-com from the web site.

Psci-com is part of the National Academic Mailing List Service, known as 'JISCMail'.
It adheres to the JISCMail Acceptable Use Policy: http://www.jiscmail.ac.uk/policyandsecurity/acceptableuse.html
and to the JISCMail guidelines for etiquette: http://www.jiscmail.ac.uk/policyandsecurity/etiquette.html

Email commands:
1. To suspend yourself from the list, whilst on leave, for example,
send an email to mailto:[log in to unmask] with the following message:

set psci-com nomail -- [include hyphens]

2. To resume email from the list, send an email to [log in to unmask] with the message:

set psci-com mail -- [include hyphens]

3. To leave psci-com, send an email to [log in to unmask] with the message:

leave psci-com -- [include hyphens]

Please allow up to 24 hours for these commands to activate.
Remember that you will need to send commands using the same email address that you used to register on psci-com.
To contact the Psci-com list owner, please send an email to: [log in to unmask]

**********************************************************************