In a world currently facing an unparalleled health crisis, the need for clear science communication has never been greater. Explaining complex ideas in a concise manner does not come naturally to everyone, but there are some simple rules you can follow.
In the opening episode of this six-part series about science communication, Pakinam Amer discusses the craft of clear storytelling and science writing with seasoned communicators and journalists.
Siri Carpenter, editor of The Craft of Science Writing, a selection of resouces from science writing platform The Open Notebook, explains how science journalism and science communication differ, but share important characteristics, including \u201ca search for some kind of truth, driven by curiosity and sometimes the desire to right some wrong.\u201d
But how do you structure a story so readers are hooked from the start, explain complicated ideas, avoid jargon, check facts? \u201cThere are so many skills that go into good science writing,\u201d Carpenter says. \u201cIt takes time and practice to get better, learning from mistakes, and from feedback.\u201d
Islam Hussein, a virologist at Massachusetts Institute of Technology, tells Amer why he took to the video platform YouTube in 2014 to tackle pseudoscience after a hand-held device was wrongly touted as a tool to detect viral infections in his native Egypt.
\u201cThere was a lot of interaction between me and the public. Some of it was good. Some of it was not, in the form of insults and threats," he says.
With the help of his son, he rigged up a home studio in his basement to create more multimedia content, using his wife and colleagues to get feedback before getting it live. \u201cWhen I hit record I want to make sure I am saying something useful and accurate,\u201d he says.
Hussein now regularly appears on the TV to explain the emerging science behind COVID-19.
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