Scientific communities: Membership at learned societies

There’s a decrease in the number of people knowing about learned societies, says Sarah Blackford at the 2015 London Naturejobs Career Expo.

Sarah Blackford is the Head of Education & Public Affairs at the Society for Experimental Biology. Here she answers a question from the 2015 London Naturejobs Career Expo on the decreasing interest in learned societies.

Further reading

Scientific communities: Build your own.

How to make the most of professional societies

 

 

Scientific communities: Build your own

Learned societies and online platforms can be great ways to develop a mutually beneficial network, say panellists at the 2015 Naturejobs Career Expo in London.

Guest contributor Paul Brack

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Jon Tennant and the merits of online scientific communities {credit}Image credit: Julie Gould{/credit}

“Networking isn’t just me trying to get something from you,” said Julie Gould, editor of Naturejobs, as she opened the session on Building Scientific Communities at the 2015 London Naturejobs Careers Expo. “Networking is about building a relationship with another person that will benefit both of you.” The two invited speakers in this session, Sarah Blackford, head of Education & Public Affairs at the Society for Experimental Biology, and Jon Tennant, an Imperial College London PhD student, discussed some methods that early career scientists can use to start these types of relationships.

Learned societies

Learned societies, such as the Royal Society of Chemistry or the Biochemical Society, are, according to Blackford, “clubs for people with a similar interest in an academic discipline.” Early-career scientists often underestimate how useful learned societies can be in helping them advance their careers. Blackford pointed out that learned societies have quite a lot of money, and, as they’re not-for-profit, “they give that money back into the scientific community.” Learned societies do this partly by organising and subsidising events, such as conferences on topics that interest their members and giving travel grants to early-career scientists to enable them to attend external meetings. Continue reading