The graduate cohort in Public Scholarship will equip doctoral students with practical tools that will help them better disseminate their work and communicate the importance of their research to broad public audiences. Participants will gain real-world experiences that will run parallel to and be supportive of each student’s individual disciplinary research program. Under the mentorship of Ian Bogost, Adia Harvey Wingfield, and Christopher Schaberg, faculty and program directors within the new Arts & Sciences Program in Public Scholarship, students will learn to effectively communicate their research work to diverse audiences, forge meaningful collaborations outside the academic realm, and contribute to societal change.
The cohort experience offers a comprehensive program in public scholarship, featuring a graduate seminar, engaging activities, and valuable resources to support students' involvement in public-facing projects.
The seminar in Public Scholarship will encompass:
- General introduction to public scholarship across Arts & Sciences
- Weekly visits from faculty active in public scholarship
- Visits from editors, publishers, and media professionals
- A collaborative writing practicum, through which the cohort members will practice writing together for public audiences and publishing this work in respected public-facing venues
- Interviews with public scholars
- Profiles of public scholarly outlets and platforms
- Local community outreach and education
- Poster displays/panel presentations for discipline-specific conferences, promoting the work of public scholarship (and the Graduate Cohort at WashU)
- Planning for future mergers of scholarship and public-facing opportunities
Through this enriched experience, students will benefit from enhanced writing quality, expanded knowledge, and strengthened connections in the realm of public scholarship.