Public engagement by researchers of different disciplines in Singapore : a qualitative comparison of macro- and meso-level concerns
Guided by neo-institutional theory, this study compares how researchers from science, technology, engineering, and math disciplines differ from researchers from the arts, humanities, and social sciences fields in terms of how macro- and meso-level concerns shaped their willingness to conduct public...
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sg-ntu-dr.10356-1414552020-06-08T09:01:38Z Public engagement by researchers of different disciplines in Singapore : a qualitative comparison of macro- and meso-level concerns Ho, Shirley S. Looi, Jiemin Leung, Yan Wah Goh, Tong Jee Wee Kim Wee School of Communication and Information Social sciences::Communication Art and Science Focus Group Discussions Guided by neo-institutional theory, this study compares how researchers from science, technology, engineering, and math disciplines differ from researchers from the arts, humanities, and social sciences fields in terms of how macro- and meso-level concerns shaped their willingness to conduct public engagement. Focus group discussions conducted among researchers based in Singapore revealed that science, technology, engineering, and math and arts, humanities, and social sciences researchers held different macro-level concerns. Particularly, science, technology, engineering, and math researchers raised more concerns about media misrepresentation, while arts, humanities, and social sciences researchers were more concerned about receiving political repercussions and public backlash. With regard to meso-level considerations, researchers from all disciplines cited similar institutional constraints for public engagement; however they possessed varying public engagement competencies and held differing perceptions of their social duty to engage the public. Hence, researchers of different disciplines desired different kinds of media training. Policy and managerial implications as well as directions for future research were provided. MOE (Min. of Education, S’pore) Published version 2020-06-08T09:01:37Z 2020-06-08T09:01:37Z 2019 Journal Article Ho, S. S., Looi, J., Leung, Y.W., & Goh, T. J. (2020). Public engagement by researchers of different disciplines in Singapore : a qualitative comparison of macro- and meso-level concerns. Public Understanding of Science, 29(2), 211-229. doi:10.1177/0963662519888761 0963-6625 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/141455 10.1177/0963662519888761 31778090 2-s2.0-85076172819 2 29 211 229 en Public Understanding of Science © 2019 The Author(s) (published by SAGE Publications). This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License. application/pdf |
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Social sciences::Communication Art and Science Focus Group Discussions Ho, Shirley S. Looi, Jiemin Leung, Yan Wah Goh, Tong Jee Public engagement by researchers of different disciplines in Singapore : a qualitative comparison of macro- and meso-level concerns |
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Guided by neo-institutional theory, this study compares how researchers from science, technology, engineering, and math disciplines differ from researchers from the arts, humanities, and social sciences fields in terms of how macro- and meso-level concerns shaped their willingness to conduct public engagement. Focus group discussions conducted among researchers based in Singapore revealed that science, technology, engineering, and math and arts, humanities, and social sciences researchers held different macro-level concerns. Particularly, science, technology, engineering, and math researchers raised more concerns about media misrepresentation, while arts, humanities, and social sciences researchers were more concerned about receiving political repercussions and public backlash. With regard to meso-level considerations, researchers from all disciplines cited similar institutional constraints for public engagement; however they possessed varying public engagement competencies and held differing perceptions of their social duty to engage the public. Hence, researchers of different disciplines desired different kinds of media training. Policy and managerial implications as well as directions for future research were provided. |
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Wee Kim Wee School of Communication and Information |
author_facet |
Wee Kim Wee School of Communication and Information Ho, Shirley S. Looi, Jiemin Leung, Yan Wah Goh, Tong Jee |
format |
Article |
author |
Ho, Shirley S. Looi, Jiemin Leung, Yan Wah Goh, Tong Jee |
author_sort |
Ho, Shirley S. |
title |
Public engagement by researchers of different disciplines in Singapore : a qualitative comparison of macro- and meso-level concerns |
title_short |
Public engagement by researchers of different disciplines in Singapore : a qualitative comparison of macro- and meso-level concerns |
title_full |
Public engagement by researchers of different disciplines in Singapore : a qualitative comparison of macro- and meso-level concerns |
title_fullStr |
Public engagement by researchers of different disciplines in Singapore : a qualitative comparison of macro- and meso-level concerns |
title_full_unstemmed |
Public engagement by researchers of different disciplines in Singapore : a qualitative comparison of macro- and meso-level concerns |
title_sort |
public engagement by researchers of different disciplines in singapore : a qualitative comparison of macro- and meso-level concerns |
publishDate |
2020 |
url |
https://hdl.handle.net/10356/141455 |
_version_ |
1681058157595459584 |