Discussing particle physics over a pint; debating the longer term of meals sustainability over complimentary peanuts. Scientists hobnobbing with the general public in a pub is not likely what involves thoughts when you consider severe science discussions. But thatâs what Pint of Science desires to alter.
The occasion, began by analysis scientists Praveen Paul and Michael Motskin, of the Imperial College London, within the U.Okay. 12 years in the past, is as we speak an annual international competition going down in 500 cities throughout 27 nations. And this yr, it is making its India debut in Bengaluru, Pune and New Delhi.
Making science accessible
Over the previous decade, regardless of Indiaâs towering achievements in science and expertise, information from the UNESCO Institute of Statistics exhibits that thereâs been a near-stagnant funding in analysis and improvement (0.65% of GDP). In comparability, China spends 2.43%, the U.S. 3.46%, and South Korea 4.93%. It doesnât assist that authoritarian governments have had a long-standing historical past of delaying or chopping funding, utilizing political rhetoric to underplay the worth of this discipline of research within the nation and encouraging disbelief and doubt within the sciences.
Besides pedagogy, which makes science appear âscary and unapproachableâ, there is additionally the issue of equating science with utility. âPolicymakers and politicians who make decisions of how much money should go into research, donât understand the importance of âthe whyâ behind the research, especially with regards to fundamental sciences [such as physics, chemistry, microbiology],â says astrophysicist Debarati Chatterjee, an affiliate professor on the Inter-University Centre for Astronomy and Astrophysics in Pune. âSuch research pushes our horizons of knowledge; they donât have immediate results or applications.â

Debarati Chatterjee
In 2017, Chatterjee â who is âheavily involved in outreach programmes focussed on inspiring and encouraging the general public, especially women, to do science through fun meansâ â was invited to current her analysis at an area pub. At the time, she was engaged on her postdoctorate on the UniversitĂ© de Caen Normandie in France. âI think I made a very pedagogical talk my first time. But after I incorporated animation into my presentation [at a later event], I remember it leading to vivid discussions,â she says. After taking part in three editions within the subsequent years, volunteering at one and âobserving its impactâ on individuals (in addition to getting new views on her personal analysis), Chatterjee determined she needed to convey Pint of Science to India. âI love the informal and accessible format,â she says, including that public-facing occasions that talk science analysis to the general public âwill have them paying closer attention to this field because it is being funded by taxpayersâ moneyâ.

Pint of Science
| Photo Credit:
Nick Rutter
âThe everydayness of a pub or a cafe changes the dynamic. We already know we might meet someone who doesnât come from our world, so weâre already open to listen to new information.âBasundhara Ghosh Physicist
Breaking the classroom impact
While Chatterjee can not think about a science discuss in a pub whereas she was a scholar in India, as we speak the presence of a craft beer and cafe tradition, and a âgeneral public that has matured and is open to using these spaces to learn as wellâ, the timing feels proper. âI have attended language meet-ups and craft workshopsâ at these venues, she says. âThe younger crowd is ready for this shake up; in fact they are enthusiastic about it.â
Interestingly, in Pune, the same format has been operating efficiently for nearly a decade. Nakul Bhonsle, the founder-director of Puneâs Great State Aleworks, and his good friend, local weather scientist Anoop Mahajan, impressed by the Pint of Scienceâs format, have been operating âScience on Tapâ at their microbrewery since 2016. âDespite its huge research institutes, thereâs no interaction between the scientific community and the general public in Pune,â says Bhonsle. âAnoop had heard of the concept in the U.K. and we adapted it. Itâs been a great event because it brings a different kind of audience into the microbrewery.â He attributes its success âto the sessions being casual, and never feeling like a classroom or seminarâ.

Pint of Science
| Photo Credit:
Nick Rutter
Theoretical physicist Basundhara Ghosh from Bengaluruâs Indian Institute of Science echoes how the setting modifications the âperception of the sciencesâ. â[At IISc], Iâve seen how programmes that invite the public into these institutions are very popular, across all ages. Everyone is still fascinated by black holes, galaxies and dark matter, says Ghosh. âBut thereâs a gap between understanding the work actually being done and the publicâs curiosity for it.â And she feels occasions like Pint of Science âare building a middle groundâ for these gaps to be lowered.

Basundhara Ghosh
Origin story
Before it took on this extra organised model, Pint of Science was an occasion referred to as âMeet the Researchersâ in 2012. Paul and Motskin organised it to convey individuals affected by Parkinsonâs, Alzheimerâs, motor neurone illness and a number of sclerosis into their analysis labs and assist them perceive the developments and stopgaps within the analysis being completed to regulate and treatment these illnesses. It was an enormous success. The following yr in May, the duo shifted the placement from their lab to pubs, and ran the primary Pint of Science competition throughout three cities within the U.Okay.
Memes and humour to interrupt the ice
At the inaugural India version, Ghosh will pepper her discuss on âThe Universe is expanding â Whatâs the large deal?â with memes, popular culture references and a way of humour. âIn our contemporary world, memes act as mnemonics â like the anime boy releasing the butterfly, or the scans of neurons lighting up â so adding them into my presentation along with technical diagrams will allow people to retain the information,â she says.
Another scientist spicing up his Pint of Science presentation, âThe Yin and Yang of Tree Invasion on Mountain Birdsâ, with visible components is Jobin Varughese. The ecologist and postdoctorate fellow at Bengaluruâs National Centre of Biological Sciences switched careers whereas learning panorama structure, after a part on ecology âthat focussed on preserving native plants and birdsâ piqued his curiosity.

Jobin Varughese
He began off by volunteering with fowl census counts earlier than realising that he may pursue science as a profession. âI didnât know people were studying birds in India,â he admits, including that the âdifferent scientists and research topics being programmed as part of Pint of Science will open the publicâs imagination to other fields of studyâ. For Varughese, his participation in Pint of Science makes full sense. âI used to be on the other side, and so, I feel I have the ability to translate my research for the general audience.â
Pint of Science takes place on May 19, 20 and 21 in Bengaluru, Pune and New Delhi. Thereâs no age restrict. For tickets, go to pintofscience.in.
The author and poet is primarily based in Bengaluru.
Published – May 15, 2025 08:08 am IST





