SAGANet

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

SAGANet.org (Social Action for Grassroots Astrobiology Networkwww.saganet.org) is a social and collaborative web-platform created to connect scientists with the public, leveraging the increasing ubiquity of social media as a platform to engage the nation's youth.

Background[]

SAGANet was founded in 2011 by Blue Marble Space Institute of Science scientists Zach Adam MSc, Julia DeMarines MSc, Heshan Illangkoon Ph.D., Betül Kaçar Ph.D., Sanjoy Som Ph.D., and Sara Imari Walker Ph.D. and was officially launched on April 12, 2012 (51 years after the first launch of a human into space and 31 years after the first launch of the Space Shuttle Columbia, (STS-1), and was announced publicly at the 2012 Astrobiology Science Conference.[1][2]

SAGANet is named after the late Carl Sagan (The acronym is used with courtesy of the Carl Sagan Foundation) and builds upon his vision of a citizenry actively engaged in learning about the cosmos. SAGANet is designed to be an immersive virtual community where non-scientist and scientist members interact in an environment of shared learning. SAGANet is currently funded by Blue Marble Space with support from the NASA Astrobiology Institute.[3]

Mission[]

The mission of SAGANet is to sustain a vibrant community of scientists and science enthusiasts in an inviting environment that supports shared learning. Equipped with a rich interface for communication (forums, user-defined interest groups, multi-user video calls and text chat), information sharing (document creation, video feed, activity statuses, photo, video and audio uploads), and social media (Facebook, Twitter, google+ and flickr integration), SAGANet. fills a previously unoccupied niche on the World Wide Web by providing a science-focused social environment around the broad and interdisciplinary field of astrobiology and space exploration.[4]

Member Demographics[]

As of March 2013, SAGANet hosts over 600 members, including students, scientists, educators, outreach coordinators, journalists, science communicators, and science enthusiasts.[5] The SAGANet community therefore represents a diverse group of individuals with varying expertise and interest in STEM-related disciplines. Representing many of the site's active members, scientist members have found SAGANet. to be a hub for both combating the “Sagan effect” by providing an easy and safe-environment for communicating science, and to informally participate in STEM education by directly connecting with the students and members of the public.

Events[]

SAGANet organizes several events on the site that engage the general public. 1) “Talk to an Astrobiologist” is a monthly event where a distinguished scientist is invited to interact with S.A.G.A.N. members. Past guest have included Dr. David Grinspoon and Dr. Paul Davies. 2) SAGANet salon is a monthly event where members of the community interact on a topic bordering science and philosophy 3) SAGANet Book Club is a biweekly event where book club members discuss relevant books, chapter by chapter, in the readers (multi-user video) chat. 4) Weekly seminars. As of March 2013, Arizona State University and Stockholm University stream their academic seminars on S.A.G.A.N.[6]

Mentoring[]

A core activity of SAGANet is to pilot mentoring via social media, by linking member scientists with scientists and educators that interact through the communication tools available on the network. Two elementary schools in California and Arizona are interacting with SAGANet mentors.[7]

Related Links[]

References[]

  1. ^ "Blue Marble Space Institute of Science". Blue Marble Space Institute of Science. Retrieved 8 March 2013.
  2. ^ Adam, Zach; J. DeMarines; H. Illangkoon; B.Kaçar; S. Som; S.I. Walker (2012). "Integrating Mentoring in a Social Network Setting with the SAGANet Mentorship Program". Proceedings of the 2012 Mentoring Conference.
  3. ^ "SAGANet Partners". Retrieved 8 March 2013.
  4. ^ DeMarines, Julia; B. Kacar; H. Illangkoon; S. Som; S.I. Walker (April 16–20, 2012). "SAGANet to the rescue: Promoting a Social Action for a Grassroots Astrobiology Network in America and Beyond". Astrobiology Science Conference 2012 Exploring Life: Past and Present, Near and Far. Archived from the original on February 17, 2013. Retrieved 8 March 2013.
  5. ^ "SAGANet Members". Retrieved 8 March 2013.
  6. ^ "SAGANet Events". Retrieved 8 March 2013.
  7. ^ "SAGANet Mentoring Program". Retrieved 8 March 2013.
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