<div dir="ltr"><p>Hey everyone,</p><p>Last week, Nassim Parvin (Information, UW Seattle) wrote an op-ed for <em>The Seattle Times</em> on driverless cars and narratives about technology. Why now? Here's the thing, Waymo, the driverless car company owned by Google’s parent company, Alphabet, is soon going to be in the Seattle market. And at the end of January, a Waymo vehicle struck a child pedestrian. Badabing-bada-boom, two timely hooks!</p><p>Nassim Parvin is the Associate Dean for Inclusion, Diversity, Equity, Access & Sovereignty (IDEAS) and a design professor with extensive expertise in the ethical and political dimensions of technology. But her opinion piece doesn't include her bio or a list of her publications or discuss her research projects and leadership. Rather, her article uses these timely hooks to bridge an important opinion: there’s a pervasive narrative about technology that treats machines as superior, which means failures are blamed on individuals rather than on system design--and this is a problem!</p><p>She sharpens this opinion to a sparkle with illuminating evidence from her research on the history of technology, cultural practices of tech, and tech policy. Though she acknowledges there are reasons to disagree, but they’re not the right reasons--affirming both her credibility and our perception of her fairness. She closes with a cautionary suggestion for Seattle policymakers and designers. What I love most is this titular line: “The stories we tell about technology shape our cities and our civic future.”</p><p>It's true! And now a question for you, what stories are you going to tell about technology? This week, you have an opportunity to consider that and writing your opinion by attending one of two workshops on op-ed writing that I'm co-hosting with Ali Durran (Center for an Informed Public, UW Seattle). We will cover the ins and outs of opinion writing so that you gain confidence in crafting a piece. You’ll practice using a timely hook, bridging the hook to your opinion, and sparkling with your evidence--and more. We’ll also have two special guests at each workshop and built-in time for you to write and workshop your ideas. </p><p>There’s such incredible expertise here at this university -- I look forward to your opinions about what you study and why it matters. See below for details on how to join one of the workshops. Please share with others who may be interested in this opportunity. <br><br>And Nassim, thanks for your timely article! I appreciate having such a good hook! :)</p><p><span class="gmail-il" style="">
<b>Op</b></span><b>-</b><span class="gmail-il" style="font-weight:bold">Eds for Academics</span><b> | In-Person | Tuesday, March 3, 2026 | 2:00–4:00 PM | William H. Gates Hall, 115 ABC – Perkins Coie Room | UW Seattle | UW ONLY</b><br><span class="gmail-il">Op</span>-<span class="gmail-il">Eds for Academics</span> (In-Person Workshop)<br>A hands-on workshop for UW tri-campus scholars working on technology and society topics. Participants will consider how to translate <span class="gmail-il">academic</span> research into persuasive public commentary. Hosted by Society + Technology at UW and the Center for an Informed Public.<br>Register: <a href="https://tinyurl.com/inperson-opedsforacademics-uw" target="_blank">https://tinyurl.com/inperson-opedsforacademics-uw</a></p><p><strong><br><span class="gmail-il">Op</span>-<span class="gmail-il">Eds for Academics</span> | Online | Thursday, March 5, 2026 | 2:00–4:00 PM | Zoom | UW ONLY</strong><br><span class="gmail-il">Op</span>-<span class="gmail-il">Eds for Academics</span> (Online Workshop)<br>A hands-on online workshop for UW tri-campus scholars working on technology and society topics. Participants will consider how to translate <span class="gmail-il">academic</span> research into persuasive public commentary. Hosted by Society + Technology at UW and the Center for an Informed Public.<br>Register: <a href="https://tinyurl.com/online-opedsforacademics-uw" target="_blank">https://tinyurl.com/online-opedsforacademics-uw</a> <br><br>Yours,</p><p>Monika Sengul-Jones (and on behalf of Ali Durran) |<br><br>Monika Sengul-Jones, PhD (she/her)<br>Director of Strategy and Operations<br>Society + Technology at UW<br>Hosted by the UW Tech Policy Lab<br>School of Law, UW Seattle<br><a href="http://www.societyandtechnology.uw.edu">www.societyandtechnology.uw.edu</a></p></div>