"I don't care - I know I'm going to look stupid but I can't back out now" I gabbled anxiously to my patient friend as the room steadily filled up around us. "As long as I can make them laugh and they learn something, then I'll be happy!"
At school, I was always the one who wimped out of giving presentations or talking in front of the class.....so what on EARTH was I doing here as an entrant to FameLab 2017??! In this international competition, budding science communicators have the challenge of explaining a scientific topic of their choice in just three minutes...but here's the catch : No PowerPoint, No audio and only the props you can carry on stage. All to be followed by 2 minutes of questioning from the judging panel. I felt completely out of my depth - not helped by the fact that I'd inexplicably chosen to talk about something completely outside my own field of plant science. And also that the event had been a complete sell-out, with all the tickets being snapped up within days by the audience members now entering the room. Amazing that so many members of the public would gladly give up their evening to come to the Crucible Theatre and hear about science.... even though we
using the main stage, I was still so nervous that I begged to go first to get it over and done with!
With the rest of the FameLab competitors for the Yorkshire Heat.
Fortunately the atmosphere was supportive rather than pressured. Our compere for the evening, Simon Watt - TV presenter, writer and president of the Ugly Animal Preservation Society - gave me some wise advice for calming myself down, including to stand at the front of the stage before the show began to get habituated to the audience. It was reassuring to spot a few friendly faces but it was a really mixed crowd - families with children, young couples, retired folk. Eventually my breathing began to ease...
...and in the nick of time, as without further ado Simon launched the proceedings. I took a deep gulp and went for it. Staggering onto the floor, I gave my best impression of being caught in a force-ten gale.
"Goodness me - it must be blowing a HURRICANE out there! Oops - I shouldn't really say that as hurricanes *actually* only form under very particular conditions..."
Don't ask me why but yes - my chosen topic was the science behind how hurricanes (also known as tropical cyclones and typhoons) form! I came across it on an online course on understanding the weather and it had simply intrigued me. It also gave me the chance to wave my arms around and make wild gesticulations to try and describe how the evaporation of water molecules off the surface of warm oceans provides the 'engine' that drives the storm. As I got underway, my rehearsals paid off and I managed to make it through without stumbling.
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The scary judging panel....from left to right: Professor Simon Foster (Director of the Krebs Institute at the University of Sheffield), Nancy Fielder (Editor of the Sheffield Star, Sheffield Telegraph and Doncaster Free Press) and Professor Elena Rodriguez-Falcon (Faculty Director of Communications and External Relations for Engineering at the University of Sheffield)
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"and the winds get faster and faster and stronger and stronger - until eventually they clock 74 miles per hour and IT'S OFFICIAL! You can call it a hurricane...but what NAME you actually give it - Hurricane Boris or Hurricane Gertrude....is a COMPLETELY DIFFERENT story!!!" I finished with a dramatic flourish before running back to my seat so fast, I had to be called back for the questions. Fortunately I was able to give reasonable answers to these (THANK YOU, World Meteorological Organisation for your "FAQ on Cyclones" webpage!) and then it was all over!
Even though I didn't stop shaking until the interval, I greatly enjoyed watching the rest of the talks. From lab-grown meat to 'Why is poo brown?"...it's astonishing just how much information you can convey in 3 minutes and the lightning-speed style meant there was no time to get bored. Perhaps this is how proper academic conferences should be done??!
Our winner, Ashley Carley: "Making those papier mache fried eggs also took quite a long time!" |
In the end, first prize went to Ashley Carley, studying for a Masters in Science Communication at the University of Sheffield - although it seems she has mastered this skill already! With ingenious use of balloons and papier-mâché 'eggs', she neatly demonstrated the concept of mitochondrial donation and three-parent embryos. "I was in disbelief when they announced my talk as the winner as I nearly dropped out several times" she said. "I'm really looking forward to seeing all of the other amazing talks and meeting more passionate people at the regional final".
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