BU is a partner of The Conversation, a news analysis and opinion website with content written by academics working with professional journalists.
In addition to the training sessions run by Conversation editors throughout the year, they have now created four new asynchronous online courses to help you learn more about working with The Conversation and what they are looking for from pitches and articles.
Four short courses are now available for you to complete online at your leisure:
- The Conversation: Who we are and how we work with academics
- How to write for The Conversation
- How to pitch to The Conversation
- Writing for Insights (The Conversation’s long-form feature series)
The courses are open to all BU academics and PhD candidates who are interested in finding out more about working with The Conversation. They will help you to understand how The Conversation works, the editorial support provided, and develop the skills to write for non-academic audiences.
The courses are being mapped to Vitae’s researcher development framework to help further contribute to professional development at all levels.
The courses can be accessed at: https://theconversationuktraining.teachable.com/
Why write for The Conversation?
The Conversation is a great way to share research and informed comment on topical issues. Academics work with editors to write pieces, which can then be republished via a creative commons license.
Since we first partnered with The Conversation, articles by BU authors have had over 9.5 million reads and been republished by the likes of The i, Metro, National Geographic Indonesia and the Washington Post.
You can learn more about working with The Conversation on the Research and Knowledge Exchange Sharepoint site