“Turning science into video” Scientific communication for and with vocational students. a pilot study

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Author (Corporation)
Publication date
2025
Type of student thesis
Course of study
Type
01A - Journal article
Editors
Editor (Corporation)
Supervisor
Parent work
Research Involvement and Engagement
Special issue
DOI of the original publication
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Series
Series number
Volume
11
Issue / Number
Pages / Duration
128
Patent number
Publisher / Publishing institution
BioMed Central
Place of publication / Event location
Edition
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Programming language
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Practice partner / Client
Abstract
Background Dissemination, i.e., the communication of research results to a wider audience, is often not part of the research process, resulting in significant delays in implementing new scientific results in practice. Young adults are an especially difficult group to reach with traditional methods of research communication, i.e., scientific publications,conferences, or panel discussions. Hence, new formats are needed to engage young adults in a dialogue with scientists and research results. The goal of this study was threefold: (1) the involvement of the target group from the start of the research project to the end and to find a topic of interest to young adults; (2) to jointly define a video format to present this topic and scientific results related to it; and (3) to evaluate content and format of the video in groups of peers not involved in the project. Methods A Focus Group was conducted with vocational students (i.e., adolescents and young adults) to define a scientific topic of interest and the exact dissemination format by means of participatory research. Qualitative analysis of the transcribed Focus Group was conducted using structured content analysis. Further, surveys before and after watching the video were conducted in classes of vocational students not involved in the Focus Group to assess their images of science, their interest in science, and their opinion on the format and content of the video. Results The Focus Group decided on the topic of stress related to school and education, and determined a group discussion with students, a professor in educational science, and a moderator from the research team. The video was well-received by peers, but almost half of participants would not watch another video like this. 21% of respondents state that the video has changed their understanding of science. Conclusion The co-creation process used in this study has resulted in a topic of interest for the targeted audience.However, while watching the video changed perception and understanding of science in some recipients, they also questioned the added value with regard to learning something new.
Keywords
Science communication, Co-creations, Young adults, Qualitative research, Associations with research, Personal understanding of scientific processes
Project
Event
Exhibition start date
Exhibition end date
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Conference end date
Date of the last check
ISBN
ISSN
2056-7529
Language
English
Created during FHNW affiliation
Yes
Strategic action fields FHNW
Publication status
Published
Review
Peer review of the complete publication
Open access category
Gold
License
'https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/'
Citation
Koechlin, H., Schüler, S., & Heuss, S. (2025). “Turning science into video” Scientific communication for and with vocational students. a pilot study. Research Involvement and Engagement, 11, 128. https://doi.org/10.1186/s40900-025-00790-4