Civic Science Observer
Recommended strategies to integrate public engagement and civic science training into graduate STEMM education

Over the past year, I had the opportunity to serve as one of the 26 advisers of a national working group convened by Research!America, co-chaired by Alan Leshner and Keith Yamamoto, and supported by the Rita Allen Foundation. Our charge was to develop concrete strategies for embedding public engagement and civic science into graduate training in science, technology, engineering, mathematics, and medicine (STEMM). The result is a set of ambitious, yet practical, recommendations for universities, federal agencies, and philanthropic funders.
The core argument is simple:ย Scientists should learn to engage with the public as part of their formal education. Not only because public trust in science is at stake, but because meaningful engagement with communities strengthens science itself.
Hereโs a snapshot of what the working group recommended:
- Universitiesย should declare public engagement training a core priority, integrate it into existing coursework, and provide staff and funding to support it. It should be recognized in tenure policies and supported across departments.
- Federal agenciesย such as the NSF and NIH can play a catalytic role. By using training grants and programs such as T32 and NRT, they can gradually phase in public engagement requirements. Just as NIHโs BEST program once modernized career training, a similar effort could prototype scalable engagement curricula.
- Philanthropiesย have long championed this space. The working group recommends that funders go furtherโembedding public engagement components in research grants and investing in the pedagogy of engagement itself, so we can learn what works, and why.
- Read the full details of the recommendations here
Fanuel Muindi is a former neuroscientist turned civic science ethnographer. He is a Professor of Practice in the College of Arts, Media, and Design at Northeastern University where he leads the Civic Science Media Lab. Dr. Muindi received his Bachelorโs degree in Biology and PhD in Organismal Biology from Morehouse College and Stanford University respectively. He completed his postdoctoral training at MIT.

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