Why Academics Need To Be Storytellers

"Mobilising and translating information is one of the most important things that we can do at the university". Speaking at the inaugural session of the PhDs Go Public Research Talk Series, Emmy Award-winner journalist and 亚洲天堂 faculty makes a call to scholars at all levels to be storytellers to elicit positive social change.

Combining his rich background in journalism with rigorous scholarship,听Peter听Klein is one of the most prominent public intellectuals in the 亚洲天堂 community.

Associate professor at听the 亚洲天堂 of Journalism, where he was the director between 2011-2015, Professor Klein is the initiator of exciting projects such as the (now transitioning into a non-profit, the Global Reporting Centre - GRC).听As part of GRC, his recently launched initiative 听documents the growing feelings of xenophobia in Europe.

Joining as a guest speaker to "Storytelling for Positive Social Change", the first session of the PhDs Go Public Research Talk Series, Professor Klein pointed to the public responsibility of academics to make their work accessible and meaningful for broader audiences.

Highlights from Peter Klein's Talk
  • "The best scholars that I've met really know how to do their high level scholarship, but also know how to translate that information [...] Mobilising and translating information is one of the most important things that we can do at the university".
  • "We're supported by public funds [...]听and what is the public getting from that? It's a question that the public has been increasingly asking [...] Storytelling is one of the ways to explain what we do, and to translate our work as scholars".
  • "Among journalists, there's still an inherent hostility against academics [...] That's partly because academics have traditionally done a very very bad job at storytelling. We don't do a good job of explaining what we're doing, and why we're doing it, and our findings in a compelling way".
  • "If collectively the academic community were to do a better job, I think the impressions of the work we'd do [...]听would soften, and they'd appreciate the incredibly important work that's done at this university and other universities".
  • "I think [public scholarship]听is critically important not just for getting your word听out, but for keeping this institution alive [...]听One of the best ways to do that is storytelling".

Link to Peter Klein's recent article in the Globe and Mail

Friday, 20 November 2015