O'Connor, RuthRoberson, Tarade Castella, ClareLeviston, Zoe2024-09-062024-09-061824-2049https://hdl.handle.net/1885/733716176Public science events are valued primarily as sites of individual learning. We explored the individual and collective value of university-based science events discussing climate change and motivations to attend. While events were most commonly valued as opportunities for learning, their social context created collective value associated with the physical gathering of like-minded people. Participants despairing at inaction on climate change were given agency through learning, participation, interpersonal discussions and normalising new behaviours. Post-event interpersonal discussions increase the reach of events beyond “the choir”. These discussions increase the diversity of messengers, creating opportunities for new framings and understandings of climate change.application/pdfen-AU© The Author(s).http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/Environmental communicationInformal learningPublic engagement with science and technologyThe value of public science events: insights from three years of communicating climate change research202310.22323/2.220508052024-04-21Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs License