Communicating research to policy & practice
NatCen Learning
This one-day course gives researchers the knowledge and tools to
communicate their research to policy and practice audiences.
Researchers will learn how to relate to practitioner audiences,
exploit the strengths of different media, and create persuasive
messages for them.
Course outline
Matching messages and audiences
- Identifying possible audiences for your research.
- Deciding what you have to say that will be useful to them.
- Exercise: identifying your audience.
Choosing modes of communication
- Discussion of the different types of media used for
communicating research - from written reports to the web - and
participants' experience of them.
- Exercise: media pros and cons.
Preparing persuasive text
- Exercise: critiquing some actual research communications - a
report, a research summary, a radio broadcast, a website, a press
release, and a workshop.
- Presentation and discussion of appropriate text for effective
communication - includes structure, level of detail, format,
language and illustrations.
- Exercise: using words, numbers and graphics.
The course will be delivered through a mixture of presentations,
discussions and practical sessions.
Who is it aimed at?
This is an intermediate level course, which assumes a general
familiarity with qualitative or quantitative research methods. But
you don't need to have experience of using these methods.
The course is relevant to those working in universities,
consultancy settings, government departments or the voluntary
sector. You will find it useful if:
- you are working as a researcher in fields relevant to public
policy or professional practice
- you would like to find more effective ways of communicating
your research to non-researcherers either inside or outside your
organisation.
Learning outcomes
By the end of the course participants will be able to:
- think through what they have to communicate to different
audiences; recognise the potential of different media for
communicating messages; and structure their communications
accordingly
- use words, numbers and graphics effectively to capture
attention and improve understanding of their research.
Cost and booking
The full fee of this course is £350. A discount is offered if you
book this course and Formulating policy
recommendations.
We offer discounts to students, academics and those working in the
voluntary sector.