How to tag the Royal Society of New South Wales in your social media posts

Are you conducting some new research you're dying to share? Were you recently recognised for your contributions to your field? The Royal Society of New South Wales would always love to hear about it. 

If you are a member of the Royal Society of NSW, you are encouraged to tag us in your social media accounts and let us know what you're up to, whether you're publishing a new paper, winning an award, or simply sharing photos from the latest event. You can also follow us on X / Twitter, Facebook, LinkedIn, and YouTube to keep updated on the latest news, live streams, events, and opportunities.

Here's how to tag the Royal Society of New South Wales on social media.

twitter 1Tagging the Society on X / Twitter

  1. Open X / Twitter.
  2. If you are on mobile, tap the blue "+" in the lower right corner to compose your tweet. If you are on a desktop, you can either click the blue quill button in the left menu or start composing your tweet in the text box at the top of the screen.
  3. After you have typed the content of your tweet, type "@royalsocnsw." This text should turn blue, indicating it is now a link to the Society's profile.
    Alternatively, you can partially type "@royalsocnsw," and then select it from the dropdown menu that appears, which will have the same result.
  4. Click or tap "Post" to publish your tweet.

facebook 1Tagging the Society on Facebook

  1. Open Facebook.
  2. Click or tap the "What's on your mind?" text box at the top of your screen to begin composing your post.
  3. After you have typed the content of your Facebook post, type "@Royal Society of NSW." A drop down menu will appear.
  4. Select "Royal Society of NSW" from the dropdown menu. This text will then appear in your post, with a blue highlight indicating it is now a link to the Society's profile.
  5. Click or tap "Post" to publish your post.

linkedin 1Tagging the Society on LinkedIn

  1. Open LinkedIn.
  2. If you are on mobile, tap the "Post" button centred at the bottom of the screen to compose your post. If you are on a desktop, click the "Start a post" text box at the top of the screen.
  3. After you have typed the content of your LinkedIn post, type "@Royal Society of NSW." A drop down menu will appear.
  4. Select "Royal Society of NSW" from the drop down menu. This text will then appear in your post, bolded to indicate it is now a link to the Society's profile.
  5. Click or tap "Post" to publish your post.

youtubeTagging the Society on YouTube

You can also tag the Society in your YouTube posts. Simply type "@RoyalSocNSW" in the description box when entering your video's details, then select "Royal Society of NSW" from the dropdown menu that pops up. "@RoyalSocNSW" will then appear in your video description, with a highlight indicating it is now a link to the Society's profile.

Journal & Proceedings of the Royal Society of NSW

 

Forthcoming Papers Accepted but not yet Published:

PhD Abstracts --

Brendan J. Byatt,  Synthesis of glyphaeaside C and structural revisions of the glyphaeaside alkaloids.

Tessa Delaney. The potential of online food ordering systems to increase healthy food purchasing behaviours.

Amy Jane Hulme.  Specification of dorsal root ganglia sensory neuron subpopulations derived from human pluripotent stem cells.

Tran Thi Bich Thuy. Development of composite films from seaweed hydrocolloids, Gac by-product, essential oils and plant extracts for preservation of fresh prawn.

Ali Yousefi.  Development of form-stable phase change material cementitious composite using recycled expanded glass and conductive fillers for thermal energy storage application.

 

These PhD abstracts will appear in the June 2024 issue.

 

Up to Contents

ISSN (online): 2653-1305

Engage with us

The Royal Society of New South Wales is an inclusive learned institution that encompasses a vibrant and diverse community of people who are dedicated to ideas that matter, drawing together individuals from a wide range of disciplines and knowledge.  The Society, which is the oldest learned society in the Southern Hemisphere, creates a focus for sharing and applying expertise to deliver an independent and authoritative voice.

The work of the Society is based on a vision of “enriching lives through knowledge and inquiry”  and active participation in its works and activities is open to all and strongly encouraged.  Outlined below, there are a number of ways in which you can engage with, contribute to, and support the work of the Society.

Attend an event

The public face of the Society is its events program (see also previous and scheduled events).  These comprise monthly meetings from Sydney (6 face-to-face lectures held bi-monthly in the State Library of NSW, and 4 or 5 online lectures as Zoom webinars), named lectures that are associated with the Society’s awards and presented by award winners, a regular program of lectures from all three branches—in the Hunter region, the Southern Highlands, and Western NSW, as well as the Annual Dinner and Awards Presentation Ceremony. These events are open to all.  In addition, there are various special events that include the annual Forum conducted by the Society and the Learned Academies, and the Ideas@theHouse series of lectures, both of which are held at Government House Sydney, and which are open only to Society members by invitation.  The majority of the lectures and events conducted by the Society are recorded and made available on its YouTube channel and through the presentations and forums link in the publishing menu.

Join the Society

A great way to contribute to the work of the Society is to join as a Member or Fellow.  Indeed, many members have chosen to join after attending a Society event and potential members are encouraged to attend an event to engage with what the Society has to offer and its values.  Applications for membership are particularly sought from young people, women, and other underrepresented groups.  The benefits of joining, the categories of membership, and how to join the Society are outlined on the preceding linked pages. The Fellowship category of membership recognises the substantial contribution made by members of the Society who are acknowledged leaders in their fields of expertise and knowledge. Fellows are entitled to use the FRSN post-nominal, gazetted by the NSW Government. 

Volunteer

The Society is a volunteer organisation, reliant on its members to organise and administer its operations and program of activities.  The bulk of this work is undertaken within the Society’s Committees, overseen by the Council.  If you would like to contribute to the work of the Society in a deeper way, please consider offering your services as a member of a committee or standing for election as an office-bearer or member of Council, or as an office-bearer or member of one of theBranch Committees. 

 Consider giving

The Society is a registered charity and very much welcomes your support though donations and bequests.  Donations to the Society's Library and Scholarship Funds are tax-deductible. Respectively, these support important work that includes the classification and restoration of the Society’s substantial library holdings, and the acknowledgment of excellence and encouragement of outstanding young researchers in NSW and the ACT. Since its inception, the Society has benefited greatly from bequests from its members and other benefactors. You may care to consider leaving a legacy to the future by remembering the Society in your will.

 

Contents of JProcRSNSW, Vol. 156, Part 1, June 2023

Earlier

The complete Volume 156, Part 1, June 2023.

Robert E. Marks
Editorial: White, the Forum, the cosmos "awash" with gravity waves.
Journal & Proceedings of the Royal Society of New South Wales 156: 1-4

Refereed Paper:

Hugh White. 
This is going to be different: Learning to live with China.
Journal & Proceedings of the Royal Society of New South Wales 156: 5-26

The Royal Society of NSW and Five Academies Forum:
Reshaping Australia – Communities in Action

The Governor, Margaret Beazley.
Opening Address.
Journal & Proceedings of the Royal Society of New South Wales 156: 27-29

Susan Pond, Stephen Garton, Julianne Schultz.
Welcome and Introduction
Journal & Proceedings of the Royal Society of New South Wales 156: 30-37

Andrew Leigh.
Ministerial Address.
Journal & Proceedings of the Royal Society of New South Wales 156: 38

Richard Holden.
I Setting the Scene: Reshaping Australia: some economic observations.
Journal & Proceedings of the Royal Society of New South Wales 156: 39-47

Alison Frame.
I Setting the Scene.
Journal & Proceedings of the Royal Society of New South Wales 156: 48-52

Kalinda Griffiths.
I Setting the Scene. Visibility, power and equity: using Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander data to drive equity in Australia.
Journal & Proceedings of the Royal Society of New South Wales 156: 53-60

James O'Donnell.
I Setting the Scene: Social cohesion, diversity and inequalities in Australian communities.
Journal & Proceedings of the Royal Society of New South Wales 156: 61-69

Schultz, Holden, Frame, Griffiths, & O'Donnell.
I Setting the Scene: Discussion and Questions.
Journal & Proceedings of the Royal Society of New South Wales 156: 70-74

Bernie Shakeshaft. 
II Health and Communities.
Journal & Proceedings of the Royal Society of New South Wales 156: 75-79

Sally Redman.
II Health and Communities. .
Journal & Proceedings of the Royal Society of New South Wales 156: 80-83

Elizabeth Elliott.
II Health and Communities. Communities committed to championing child health
Journal & Proceedings of the Royal Society of New South Wales 156: 84-92

Maree Teesson et al. 
II Health and Communities. A mentally healthy future for all Australians.
Journal & Proceedings of the Royal Society of New South Wales 156: 93-97

Schultz, Shakeshaft, Redman, Elliott, & Teesson.
II Health and Communities. Discussion and Questions.
Journal & Proceedings of the Royal Society of New South Wales 156: 98-103

Louise Adams.
III Natural and Built Environmenrt.
Journal & Proceedings of the Royal Society of New South Wales 156: 104-106

David Schlosberg. 
III Natural and Built Environment. Communities in action: grounded imaginaries in practice.
Journal & Proceedings of the Royal Society of New South Wales 156: 107-109

Tone Wheeler.
III Natural and Built Environment. Inequality in housing, and community solutions..
Journal & Proceedings of the Royal Society of New South Wales 156: 110-125

Angelica Kross.
III Natural and Built Environment. A Western Sydney activist’s presentation.
Journal & Proceedings of the Royal Society of New South Wales 156: 126-127

Schultz, Adams, Schlosberg, Wheeler, & Kross.
III Natural and Built Environment. Discussion and Questions.
Journal & Proceedings of the Royal Society of New South Wales 156: 128-134

Peter Shergold.
IV Education. Reshaping Australian education.
Journal & Proceedings of the Royal Society of New South Wales 156: 135-137

Pasi Sahlberg. 
IV Education. Achieving equity in education is contingent on clearly defining it.
Journal & Proceedings of the Royal Society of New South Wales 156: 135-145

Kim Beswick.
IV Education. Segregating students in NSW is exacerbating inequities and damaging achievement: We need to change the public discourse.
Journal & Proceedings of the Royal Society of New South Wales 156: 146-153

Lisa Jackson Pulver.
IV Education.
Journal & Proceedings of the Royal Society of New South Wales 156: 154-158

Schultz, Shergold, Sahlberg, Beswick, & Jackson Pulver.
IV Education. Question and Discussion.
Journal & Proceedings of the Royal Society of New South Wales 156: 159-161

Julianne Schultz, Ariadne Vromen, and Lisa Jackson Pulver.
V Summary and Solutions.
Journal & Proceedings of the Royal Society of New South Wales 156: 162-171

Stephen Garton, Susan Pond.
Report and Closing Remarks.
Journal & Proceedings of the Royal Society of New South Wales 156: 172-175

Obituaries:

Davina Jackson and Robert Marks.
Ragbir Singh Bhathal FRSN (1936–2022)
Journal & Proceedings of the Royal Society of New South Wales 156: 176-177

Robert Marks.
Christopher Joseph Fell AO FRSN HonFIEAust (1940−2022)
Journal & Proceedings of the Royal Society of New South Wales 156: 178-180

Robert Marks and others.
Jeremy Guy Ashcroft Davis AM FRSN (1942–2023)
Journal & Proceedings of the Royal Society of New South Wales 156: 181-184

The Royal Society of New South Wales Awards for 2023:
Journal & Proceedings of the Royal Society of New South Wales 156: 185-189

Later

Up to Contents

ISSN (online): 2653-1305

Royal Society of NSW Meeting Presentations—Archive

Since 2020, almost all of the Society's meetings, either face-to-face or online, have been recorded and made available on the Society's YouTube channel.

While the content for the current year is available on the main presentation page, this page provides access to archived content for the years:

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