Skip to main content
Illustration of book, glasses, coffee, hands, pens, paper, and phone
Artwork by Sandbox Studio, Chicago with Shawna X.

Science gets social

If you like your science with a cup of coffee, a pint of beer or a raucous crowd, these events may be for you.

With an explosion of informal science events popping up around the world, it’s easier than ever to find ways to connect with scientists and fellow science enthusiasts.

Can’t find an event near you? Start your own! There are plenty of ways to reach out to fellow organizers for support.

 

Illustration of two boxing gloves going head to head with particles and sparks

Science Slam

At a Science Slam, performers compete for the affection of an audience—usually registered by clap-o-meter—by giving their best short, simple explanations of their research.

The first Science Slam took place in 2004 at a festival in Darmstadt, Germany, home of the GSI Centre for Heavy Ion Research and mission control for the European Space Agency. Alex Deppert, a city employee and poet with a PhD related to science communication, adapted the idea from the competitive Poetry Slams that started in Chicago in the 1980s. Science Slams now take place across the globe.

 

Illustration of "Science" banner with three circus tents beneath

Science Festivals

Festivals offer a variety of activities for adults, from live tapings of “You’re the Expert,” a podcast in which comedians attempt to guess the obscure specialty of a scientist guest; to science pub crawls; to after-hours events at local museums; to the Festival of Bad Ad Hoc Hypotheses—an event created by cartoonist Zach Weiner of the online comic Saturday Morning Breakfast Cereal at which scientists attempt to sincerely explain and defend fundamentally ridiculous theories before a panel of judges.

The modern science festival began in the late 1980s in Edinburgh, Scotland, and Cambridge, England. It spread across Europe and Asia and, in 2007, arrived at a different Cambridge, the home of MIT and Harvard University.

In 2009, the handful of US-based festival organizers formed the Science Festival Alliance. According to an annual report, in 2013 almost 300 events associated with the Science Festival Alliance drew more than 1000 visitors. About 30 of them drew more than 10,000 visitors each.

 

Illustration of glasses, beakers, and particles floating around

Nerd Nite

At Nerd Nite, a few people give short talks on their research or other topics of geeky interest in front of a potentially boozy crowd.

The first Nerd Nite took place in 2004 at The Midway Café bar in the Jamaica Plain neighborhood of Boston. Regular patron Christopher Balakrishnan, then a PhD candidate in evolutionary biology at Boston University, often found himself there telling tales from his three-month fieldwork stints in Africa. The bartenders suggested that he call his friends together and put on a slideshow.

Balakrishnan took the concept to the next level, inviting three other BU grad students to join him in explaining their own areas of research. The event drew enough of a crowd that, for the next couple of years, he continued to find researchers and organize talks. He eventually convinced his friend Matt Wasowski, who ran a series of trivia nights in New York, to try it out, too. The two have since helped spread Nerd Nite to more than 75 cities around the world.

 

Illustration of to coffee cups with bagel

Science Café

The Science Café is the salon of the informal science-learning world. For the price of a cup of coffee or a glass of wine, Science Café participants receive a short talk on science or technology, and then the floor opens for discussion and debate.

The Science Café is an offshoot of the Café Scientifique, created in 1998 in Leeds, England, by British television producer Duncan Dallas. The Café Scientifique, in turn, is a spinoff of the Café Philosophique, a philosophy-themed café that began in France in 1992.

In 2006, the producers of the public television science program NOVA gathered under one umbrella the few dozen Science Cafés that had popped up in the United States and began to offer resources to organizers, speakers and attendees through the site www.sciencecafes.org.

Today Science Cafés exist in at least 49 US states and 15 countries, operating under names such as Science on Tap, Science Pub, Ask a Scientist and Café Sci.

 

Illustration of boat in semi-circle shape with orange clouds in background, and green water beneath

Science Tourism

You can also take science learning on the road—or out to sea—with science tourism companies such as Science Getaways, started in 2011 by astronomer Phil Plait and his wife, Marcella Setter, or Insight Cruises, which since 2008 have taken experts on board to offer lectures, discussions and tours.

 

Like what you see? Sign up for a free subscription to symmetry!