Effective Scientific Communication is a book that offers practical guides in a range of scientific skills. This is a text that is very clearly written for students in the sciences . . . It is accessible without dumbing-down the scientific process, and offers tips and tricks throughout in order to help the reader navigate the beginning of their writing career. This is a real strength of the book. a strong introduction to the scientific process and communicating about data . . . I can see it quickly becoming a core and essential text. It will certainly be on my reommended reading lists

Craig Harper, Nottingham Trent University, The Cognitive Psychology Bulletin

Writing and the sciences are intricately linked. Without writing, science would not exist -- and could not be funded, communicated, replicated, enhanced, or applied. Further, writing helps scientists (and students) understand the science, explain the results of research in a greater context, and develop new ideas. Working from this philosophy, this book primarily addresses undergraduate STEM majors and minors who want or need to improve their scientific writing skills. Grounded in the basics of rhetorical research and scientific writing practices and guided by the authors' experiences in the classroom, this book makes the case that writing is an essential component of science regardless of the stage of the scientific process, and that it is in fact a component of thinking about science itself. Featuring student-centered stories that place each topic in context and suggestions for practice, Hanganu-Bresch and Flaherty arm STEM students with the skills to enhance critical thinking and cultivate good writing habits.
Les mer
Introduction: The Story of Scientific Writing Part I: The Tao of Communicating Science Chapter 1. Cultivating Good Writing Habits Chapter 2. Target Audience Chapter 3. Ethics in Scientific Communication Chapter 4. Critical Thinking Chapter 5. Communicating Basic Statistics Chapter 6. Visual Communication Chapter 7. Research and Documentation Part II: Genres of Scientific Communication Chapter 8. Writing Original Research Papers Chapter 9. Review Papers Chapter 10. Abstracts and summaries Chapter 11. Writing Proposals Chapter 12. Presentations Chapter 13. Writing in the Sciences: Minor Genres Chapter 14. Scientific Writing for Multimedia and the Web APPENDIX: The Writing Toolbox Crafting Effective Sentences, Paragraphs, and Papers
Les mer
"Effective Scientific Communication is a book that offers practical guides in a range of scientific skills. This is a text that is very clearly written for students in the sciences . . . It is accessible without dumbing-down the scientific process, and offers tips and tricks throughout in order to help the reader navigate the beginning of their writing career. This is a real strength of the book. a strong introduction to the scientific process and communicating about data . . . I can see it quickly becoming a core and essential text. It will certainly be on my reommended reading lists" -- Craig Harper, Nottingham Trent University, The Cognitive Psychology Bulletin
Les mer
Selling point: Addresses the unique demands of science writing for students in STEM disciplines Selling point: Focuses on science writing-specific forms like IMRaD, abstracts, proposals, and presentations
Les mer
Cristina Hanganu-Bresch is Associate Professor of Writing and Rhetoric at the University of the Sciences, where she has been teaching writing and scientific writing since 2008. She holds graduate degrees in rhetoric and scientific and technical communication from James Madison University and the University of Minnesota. She is passionate about rhetoric of science, medical rhetoric, and writing education. Kelleen Flaherty is adjunct Assistant Professor of Biomedical Writing at the University of the Sciences. She has worked as a bench scientist, a college professor (for scientific and writing classes), and for the professional medical educational industry as a regulatory writer, a promotional writer, a publications writer, and a continuing medical education writer. She regularly presents at the national level on topics germane to professional medical writers and serves on both local and national committees and commissions dedicated to training medical writers.
Les mer
Selling point: Addresses the unique demands of science writing for students in STEM disciplines Selling point: Focuses on science writing-specific forms like IMRaD, abstracts, proposals, and presentations
Les mer

Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9780190646813
Publisert
2020
Utgiver
Vendor
Oxford University Press Inc
Vekt
739 gr
Høyde
152 mm
Bredde
236 mm
Dybde
25 mm
Aldersnivå
P, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
432

Om bidragsyterne

Cristina Hanganu-Bresch is Associate Professor of Writing and Rhetoric at the University of the Sciences, where she has been teaching writing and scientific writing since 2008. She holds graduate degrees in rhetoric and scientific and technical communication from James Madison University and the University of Minnesota. She is passionate about rhetoric of science, medical rhetoric, and writing education. Kelleen Flaherty is adjunct Assistant Professor of Biomedical Writing at the University of the Sciences. She has worked as a bench scientist, a college professor (for scientific and writing classes), and for the professional medical educational industry as a regulatory writer, a promotional writer, a publications writer, and a continuing medical education writer. She regularly presents at the national level on topics germane to professional medical writers and serves on both local and national committees and commissions dedicated to training medical writers.