Date post: | 22-Dec-2015 |
Category: |
Documents |
Upload: | nathaniel-houston |
View: | 213 times |
Download: | 0 times |
Writing for a non-specialist audience: Scientific writing competitions
Dr Helen WebsterWriting Development Centre
The Impact Agenda
Impact
Accountability and funding:
RCUK
Quality: The REF
Public engagement: NCL as civic university
Employability and transferable
skills
Scientific Writing Competitions
Routes to public engagement and impact: Broadcast media (print, television, radio) Social media Public outreach events
All of these benefit from training and support
Scientific writing competitions are a good way to promote your research and your profile on a large scale and in a supported way
Major science writing competitions
Europe PubMed Central Access to Understanding 2014
http://europepmc.org/ScienceWritingCompetition
PhD and Pdoc, pre-selected topics, closes 9th Dec
Medical Research Council Max Perutz Award
http://www.mrc.ac.uk/Sciencesociety/Awards/index.htm
MRC funded PhD, your own research
The Wellcome Trust Science Writing Prize
In association with the 'Guardian' and the 'Observer‘
http://www.wellcome.ac.uk/Funding/Public-engagement/Science-Writing-Prize/index.htm
Professional scientists, Non-professional writers
(UG>Pdoc) Any area of science
Science writing competitions: What do they have in common?
They all want to see
800 words Clear writing Writing that is accessible to a general, non-specialist,
but interested audience Writing that goes beyond description (of the problem
and of what the researchers did) Writing that effectively communicates the contribution
of the research (Why does the research matter?) Writing that is engaging
Starting with your audience
“clear” “accessible” “engaging”
Writing for a non-specialist audience: What do science writers say?
“If in doubt, assume the reader knows nothing. However, never make the mistake of assuming that the reader is stupid. The classic error in journalism is to overestimate what the reader knows and underestimate the reader's intelligence.”
Tim Radford’s Manifesto for the Simple Scribe: The 25 commandments http://
www.guardian.co.uk/science/blog/2011/jan/19/manifesto-simple-scribe-commandments-journalists
Meeting in the middle: knowledge, interest, intention
Scientist
Reader
• What is your message?
• What is your aim?• What is the
interest?
• What do they want?
• What are their expectations/needs?
• What will they do with it?The
science writer’s role
Scientists
Quality Lay
publishing
Reports
Tabloids, Clickbait
The Food Chain
Academic scientific peer reviewed publishing
Stakeholder reports Popular science
books/blogs/magazines Textbooks Quality press (broadsheets,
national news channels) Tabloids, ‘in brief’ news sites Online clickbait, listicles
Structure
The research paper: Diagram of structure
Introduction and literature review
Methods
Results
Discussion andConclusions
The news report: Diagram of structure
The ‘inverted pyramid’ model
Most important/attention-grabbing information
Elaboration and detail
Least important information? Return to why it’s interesting/important?
What’s the story here?
Isn’t science/nature amazing/weird? Plucky researchers strike a blow against disease So that’s why....now we understand. Bet you’re glad this isn’t you!
What story do you want to tell about your own research?
What makes a good opening?
What did you think of those openings?
The hook:
Connection to real or possible personal experience The Unexpected, The Mysterious and The Weird Or both! An emotional reaction
A good opening paragraph: Example
Studying blindness? There’s an app for that
Everything is hazy; I can’t even see my glasses. I keep my eyes closed; it doesn’t seem to make much difference opening them. My hand feels clumsily around the bedside table, knocking my mobile phone to the floor, and eventually I come across my glasses. On they go, and I can see again. Those brief few seconds as I awake each morning serve as a continual reminder of how much I value my sight.
Andrew Bastawrous, winner of the Max Perutz Science Writing Award 2012
The Middle Bit: finding a balance and getting to the point
How much knowledge does your reader really need to understand the research and its significance?
Where is the point in these texts where they move from setting the scene to describing the research breakthrough?
Academic Paragraph structure
Self assessment can also develop skills which make a student more attractive to prospective employers. Employers value students with skills in self assessment because these types of skills are relevant to a wide range of employment contexts. They want graduates who can accurately assess their own competencies in performing tasks. Students who can do this are well placed to take on responsibilities and adapt readily to roles in work places. The value in developing these types of assessment can be seen to go beyond meeting immediate educational needs. Students who have developed an autonomous approach to learning are well set up for life-long learning which will continue throughout and beyond their working lives.
Topic sentence: Introduction of the paragraph’s main idea
Main body in which the initial assertion is developed and explained
Conclusion to be drawn from the above points
Signpost word
Language
Writing about science: Complex material simple expression
“Whenever I write about science, I imagine a parrot on my shoulder saying ‘can it be said more simply’?”
Attributed to Dr Max Perutz, 1962 Nobel Prize in Chemistry,
after whom the Max Perutz Award is named
‘Simply’
Avoiding Jargon
“A plain English summary is a brief summary that has been written for members of the public, rather than researchers or professionals. It should be written clearly and simply, without jargon and with an explanation of any technical terms that have to be included.” – INVOLVE
Jargon is simply precise technical language which is used in an inappropriate context, in which the audience does not share the common and professional language the terms belong to.
Writing for a non-specialist audience: What do science writers say?
“The shortlisted authors did a great job of using eye-catching imagery to snare our attention.”
Jenny Rohon (Judge, Max Perutz Science Writing Award 2012),
in Mind the Gap blog
“Some of our writers used metaphor to really good effect. But there were examples of some metaphors that were a bit off-piste.
So think clearly about whether the metaphor is too tenuous, or simply extended beyond its useful life.”
Sharmila Nebhrajani
Using Imagery
Simile Metaphor Extended
metaphor
Symbolism
“research is like a journey” “research is a journey” “research is a journey. As
we travel, we may find we do not arrive at the destination we anticipated, or by the paths we planned”
We cannot know the destination of the Journey
The uses of metaphor: the spices in your dish
Metaphors can enable you to make a strong connection with the shared experience between you and your audience
It can create a strong ‘visual’ or concrete impression, which helps to explain the more abstract aspects of research
It makes your writing more engaging and interesting
Metaphor: leaving a sour taste
You need to be sure that both you and your audience share the same common understanding of the metaphor
Extended metaphors can break down as your meaning is twisted to fit the metaphor
Mixed metaphors are confusing
Too much metaphor can seem overly poetical and make the text too abstract
Voices – scientist, writer, reader
Scientist: Quotations from the scientists can change the pace, add a ‘human’ element, give a sense of the excitement of research
Reader: Using questions as paragraph openings can include the voice of the reader
Writer: do you want your own voice to reflect that of the scientist or that of the reader’s perspective?
Throwing the baby out with the bathwater
Scientific communication – What values and features
of academic scientific writing do we want to preserve?
Which hinder scientific communication to non-academic readers?
Europe PubMed Central Science Writing Competition: Comments from two judges
“… we are looking for accurate, balanced representation of the research.”
Anna Kinsey (Europe PMC Engagement Manager and Access to Understanding organiser)
“The best writers made complex science accessible, without patronising the reader. They drew out the ‘so what?’ question – why should I read this, why should I care? They were frank about the unknowns and the limitations of the science. And they created energy and excitement about the research, but without hyperbole.”
Sharmila Nebhrajani
Further reading: Writing for news media
Cole, P. (2008) New writing. The Guardian 25 September. Available at http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2008/sep/25/writing.journalism.news.
Evans, H. (2000) Essential English for journalists, editors and writers. Revised edition. London: Pimlico
Giles, C. (2011) What's the point of this story? Handy tips for science writers. The Guardian 9 May. Available at http://www.guardian.co.uk/science/2011/may/09/handy-tips-science-writers.
March, D. (2007) Guardian style. London: Guardian Books Parry, V. (2011) You want to know more, I know you do. The Guardian 3 May.
Available at http://www.guardian.co.uk/science/2011/may/03/secrets-good-science-writing.
Radford, T. (2011) A manifesto for the simple scribe – my 25 commandments for journalists. The Guardian 21 January. Available at http://www.guardian.co.uk/science/blog/2011/jan/19/manifesto-simple-scribe-commandments-journalists.
Vitae: the Engaging Researcher
Other routes to impact
Public outreach events