Published: Nov. 4, 2019 By
Attendees participating in the #SciWriMentoring session at the recently concluded conference at Penn State

Attendees participating in the #SciWriMentoring session at the recently concluded conference at PennsylvaniaState University. (Credit: Mike Houtz)

Editor's note: Due to the coronavirus pandemic, the ScienceWriters2020 conference has been postponed to fall 2021.


񱦵 and CU Anschutz Medical Campus will welcome hundreds of science journalists, storytellers and organizational communicators to their respective campuses Oct. 9–13, 2020, for ScienceWriters2020 (#sciwri20).

The annual conference is the nation’s premier science communications gathering and is organized by the Council for the Advancement of Science Writing (CASW) and the National Association of Science Writers (NASW) in coordination with a different research institution each year. The two CU campuses are co-hosting the high-profile event, expected to draw more than 650 attendees.

The five-day conference features:

  • Panels and sessions featuring top scientists in every field from around the nation and world—including the CU system—who can address key new discoveries and cutting-edge research
  • Professional development sessions designed to cover issues in science writing and communication and help writers hone their craft;
  • Interactive lab tours and field trips
  • Lunch with a Scientist sessions allowing attendees to have a more casual learning experience

The event, which serves as the annual meeting for NASW and includes CASW’s New Horizons in Science program, provides an array of networking opportunities that can result in new scientific partnerships, training opportunities for students and media coverage. The 12thannual ScienceWriters joint conference recently concluded. It was hosted by PennsylvaniaState University in State College, Pennsylvania. CASW’s New Horizons briefing was presented in Boulder once before, in 1988.

“From the moment the word spread that the University of Colorado had offered to host ScienceWriters2020, excitement has been growing in the science writing community. We’re eager to get a close-up look at the science being done at these two research powerhouses,” said Rosalind Reid, CASW executive director. “It’s a bonus to be gathering in a beautiful and dynamic region full of places to explore and stories to find.”

While the conference headquarters will be at 񱦵, shuttles will transport participants to the CU Anschutz campus in Aurora, which is the largest academic health center in the Rocky Mountain region and a world-class medical destination at the forefront of transformative education, science, medicine and healthcare.

The CU Anschutz campus includes the CU health professional schools, multiple centers and institutes and two nationally ranked hospitals, UCHealth University of Colorado Hospital and Children’s Hospital Colorado, which treat nearly 2 million patients each year. With the facilities to support the entire spectrum of research – from the lab to patient application – on one campus allows innovative new solutions from cancer to Alzheimer’s disease to be available here before anywhere else.

Participants at the science writers conference in 2019

A panel at ScienceWriters2019 in Pennsylvania.

“Faculty on the CU Anschutz Medical Campus are pushing the science behind medical care to new horizons. They’re making new discoveries and extraordinary breakthroughs that save lives,” saidDonald Elliman, Jr., chancellor of theCU Anschutz Medical Campus. “Journalists playa critical role in bringing science and research to the forefront of public conversation. We look forward to welcoming the science journalism community to our campus for ScienceWriters2020.”

񱦵, meanwhile, is nationally recognized as one of only 36 AAU public research universities. Established in 1876, 񱦵 is a Tier 1 public research university with five Nobel laureates, nine MacArthur “genius” fellows and is the No. 1 public university recipient of NASA awards.

񱦵 is a leader in many fields, including aerospace engineering, physics and environmental law. The school partners with many notable federal research labs, including the National Center for Atmospheric Research, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) and the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST).

Faculty at the four campus CU system attracted more than $1.2 billion in sponsored research funding and gifts during the 2018-19 fiscal year. Most sponsored research funding is awarded by federal agencies. In 2018–19, CU received $771 million in federal awards and $388.4 million in non-federal awards.

Of the total, 񱦵 brought in $630.9 million and Anschutz attracted $553.5 million. In addition, CU has research partnerships with such organizations as Ball Aerospace, Battelle, Chevron, Lockheed Martin, Northrup Grumman, NREL,Wyle Laboratoriesand many others.

“We look forward to partnering on this conference with local research institutes, federal labs and the businesses and corporations that make the Front Range such a hot spot for the science and technology that positively impact humanity and solve pressing global issues,” 񱦵 Chancellor Philip P. DiStefano said.

Registration is limited to professional and student science journalists and communicators and will open in August 2020. Details will be posted on the as they become available.