Day one.
Let me set the scene for you. It’s 8.40am. I’m sat in the communications office
room at the Pawsey Supercomputing Centre. My boss walks into the office with
the greeting of “Good morning Kids!” to my second supervising boss and myself.
This is the beginning of what I feel like will turn into a nostalgic tradition.
I was not wrong.
He sits
down at his desk, turns on the desktop computer, swivels his chair around to
face me, and asks the second most profound question of the day “So, why are you
here?” My reply consisted of something along the lines of “To watch, to listen, to learn. I know I can
write well, but I know nothing about science and supercomputing. This placement
will teach me how to write about topics I previously knew nothing about. It
will push my boundaries from the word go.”
Now, I’m
not going to lie to you, I was rather impressed at my spontaneous response,
which was the truth, but not something I had actively considered, no doubt
because it scares me half to death. But then again, nothing worth doing is ever
going to be easy.
My task for
day one consisted of researching and writing an article for Science Network WA
entitled “What is big data?” I’m not sure how many of you are familiar with the
concept of big data, but I challenge you to do your research and compose a
succinct definition that is both understandable for the less scientifically
literate reader, yet comprehensive enough to satisfy specialising scientists and
journalists.
The only
comparative analogy I can give you to demonstrate the difficulty of this task,
especially since I haven’t practised journalism since the first year of my
degree, is the act of attempting to describe what an orange looks like to someone
that has never seen one before. Here you can see the point at which I realise
that I am barely doggy paddling through the deep end that I previously referred
to as “pushing my boundaries”.
After
expressing my struggle to my boss, he explained that you have two choices. He
said you can either choose write a piece that dances over the topic and ticks
the boxes, or you can get down to the in-depth explanation into what makes big
data big. And with the help of some hand-drawn umbrella diagrams, he asked me
“which approach do you want to take?” That was the most profound question of
the day, because right there and then it made me question what kind of writer,
and by extension public communicator, do I want to be? Well, I think I’ll have
to get back to you with an answer at then end of day 20.
Both my
bosses appear to be hilarious, welcoming, abrupt, kind, real, open, honest and
intelligent. They hold the level of intellect towards communications that I
dream of possessing. I know that I will learn more from them over the next 19
days than any unit could teach, and despite the doggy paddling, I also know
that I will enjoy the next few months more than I could have thought possible.

1 comment:
Wow, I really enjoyed this post! Your title drew me in to read it, and I'm glad I did.... not because I have an interest in "big data"; but because it appears that you have made a placement choice that offers leadership.
As with your challenge on describing an orange.... I challenge others to describe "leadership". It sounds like you have landed in a place that will teach you that... engagement, empowerment, interest in your views, mentorship, example... Consider yourself lucky!
Your supervisor's question: "So what are you doing here?" brings me back to a recent conversation I had in my workplace with a manager, who similarly zeroed in on finding out what it was I wanted to get out my experience...and advised from that perspective, not in reverse.
You might find some synergies with the supervisor you have found with this article by Forbes on leadership traits:
http://www.forbes.com/sites/glennllopis/2013/02/18/the-most-successful-leaders-do-15-things-automatically-every-day/.
It seems that your placement choice is already working towards number 4!
I will be very interested in continuing to find out how your journey is going. Best of luck, and remember - everyone starts somewhere! A challenge is as good as a holiday ;)
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