English Communication For Scientists

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English Communication for Scientists

Unit 1: Communicating as a Scientist


Communication is an integral part of the research you perform as a scientist. Your
written papers serve as a gauge of your scientific productivity and provide a long-
lasting body of knowledge from which other scientists can build their research. The
oral presentations you deliver make your latest research known to the community,
helping your peers stay up to date. Discussions enable you to exchange ideas and
points of view. Letters, memos, and résumés help you build and maintain
relationships with colleagues, suppliers, employers, and so on.

Scientific communication is not limited to formal papers and presentations for your
peers. As a scientist, you engage in communication activities with yourself, too.
Drafting a research proposal, for example, helps you understand the context and
motivation for your future work and helps you focus on specific, realistic objectives.
Adding entries in your laboratory notebook helps you crystallize your ideas and
creates a track record of your thinking or experiments. Using mathematical or
chemical notations helps you tackle complex concepts. Graphing data helps you
answer research questions.

Finally, scientists are increasingly considered to be accountable to society at large;


hence, you must know how to communicate successfully with people from a variety
of backgrounds. For example, you may find yourself communicating in the classroom
to help students develop their knowledge, sharpen their skills, and refine their
attitudes. You may also volunteer or be called upon to write or speak about science
for a broader, nonspecialist audience.

This Nature Education series on English Communication for Scientists aims to help
you communicate more effectively as a scientist, specifically in the English language.
Although it was developed with nonnative speakers of English in mind, it should
prove useful for native speakers, too. It includes the following six units, all illustrated
with commented examples of documents, presentations, and so on.
Communicating as a Scientist (the present introductory unit) will help you understand
what makes communication effective and will help you identify your purpose and
analyze your audience, among others, in terms of its level of specialization. It then
proposes basic strategies to address less specialized audiences and mixed
audiences, whether orally or in writing.
Writing Scientific Papers will help you select and organize a paper's content, draft it
more effectively, and revise it efficiently. Among others, it offers advice on using
verbs optimally, provides general rules for text mechanics (abbreviations,
capitalization, hyphens, and so on), and points out frequent shortcomings for
speakers of specific language groups.
Writing Correspondence will help you write an effective first-contact e-mail,
demonstrate your qualifications for a job in an application letter and résumé, and
prepare clear, accurate, and concise memos and progress reports. In particular, it
discusses how to select an appropriate tone for corresponding in English.
Giving Oral Presentations will help you select and organize the content of an oral
presentation, create effective slides to support it, deliver the presentation effectively,
and answer questions usefully. It also offers tips on how to deliver a presentation as
a non-native speaker of English and how to handle stage fright and mishaps.
Interacting During Conference Sessions will help you create, promote, and present
scientific posters effectively, chair a conference session or moderate a panel, and
finally take part in a panel discussion. It includes advice on how to introduce and
wrap up sessions, introduce speakers, and manage time.
Communicating in the Classroom will help you prepare, run, and evaluate your
classroom sessions. As an alternative to mere lecturing, it focuses on defining
learning outcomes, designing learning activities, and facilitating active classroom
sessions.

Unit 2: Writing Scientific Papers


As a scientist, you are expected to share your research work with others in various
forms. Probably the most demanding of these forms is the paper published in a
scientific journal. Such papers have high standards of quality, and they are formally
disseminated and archived. Therefore, they constitute valuable, lasting references for
other scientists — and for you, too. In fact, the number of papers you publish and
their importance (as suggested by their impact factor) are often viewed as a reflection
of your scientific achievements. Writing high-quality scientific papers takes time, but it
is time well invested.

As you may have noticed, however, many scientific papers fail to usefully
communicate research work to their audience. They focus on the authors instead of
on the readers by failing to clarify the motivation for the work or by including
unnecessary details. Or they try to impress the readers rather than inform them. As a
result, they are interesting to or understandable by only a small set of highly
specialized readers. Effective scientific papers, in contrast, are interesting and useful
to many readers, including newcomers to the field.

This unit will help you write better scientific papers in English. In particular, it will help
you select and organize your content, draft your paper, and revise your writing so that
your final paper is useful to a broad audience — not just a few specialists.
Unit 3: Giving Oral Presentations
Oral presentations are a richer medium than written documents. They allow you to
establish stronger contact with the audience and better convince them of your
viewpoint through verbal and nonverbal delivery, as well as the ensuing interaction.
Oral presentations have a price, however, in terms of the audience's time. If you give
a poor 15-minute presentation to an audience of 200 people, you have wasted the
equivalent of 50 hours of work — more than a week of someone's work time.
Preparing effective oral presentations, like writing effective scientific papers, takes
time, but it is time well invested.

Still, many oral presentations are ripe for improvement. Think of the last large
conference you attended. With typically three to four talks an hour, eight hours a day
over several days, such conferences can expose you to dozens of presentations.
What fraction of these delivered a message that was useful to you (that is, how many
of them did more than simply provide a great deal of complicated information)? What
fraction of the presentations did you find fascinating (that is, how many got your
undivided attention from the speaker's first word to his or her last)? An effective oral
presentation gets you to pay attention, to understand, and to think or do things
differently as a result of it.

This unit will help you prepare and deliver more effective oral presentations in
English. It will help you select and organize a presentation's content, create slides (if
appropriate), deliver the presentation, and answer audience questions. It illustrates
each of these tasks using three example presentations, which exemplify different
levels of specialization.

 The first is a 15-minute conference presentation by John Creemers on "PREPL, a putative


oligopeptidase deleted in patients with hypotonia-cystinuria syndrome." It is clearly meant for a
specialized audience, yet scientists from other fields should be able to understand the overall story
presented.
 The second is a 10-minute presentation by Marie Verbist on her "Automated alignment
procedure for stitching with a focused ion beam" to an audience of fellow PhD students. Because the
attendees can come from all fields of science and engineering, Marie's presentation is less specialized
than John's: it is meant to spark interest for her work in everyone present.
 The third is a six-minute presentation by Jean-luc Doumont on "What you should know about
TeX" to an audience of scientists. For this short, nontechnical presentation, Jean-luc chose not to use
slides.
You can watch all three presentations in the section Delivering Your Oral
Presentation.

Unit 4: Interacting During Conference Sessions


Scientific conferences and related gatherings offer plenty of formal opportunities to
interact with other scientists. At a conference, you may be asked to present a poster,
which is your chance to discuss your topic in more depth with interested attendees.
At some point, you may also be called upon to chair a presentation session. Finally,
you may be invited to take part in or perhaps even moderate a panel discussion.

Moments of interaction are harder to prepare for than one-way presentations, and too
many scientists forgo this preparation altogether. Is it not enough to be there, be
yourself, and do the best you can? Can you actually prepare something when you do
not know what questions you will be asked or what situations you will face? Of course
you can. This unit shows you how.

Unit 5: Communicating in the Classroom


For centuries, the typical communication in the classroom has been lecturing: The
one who owns the knowledge (the instructor) is supposed to give it to those who do
not (the students), like someone pours liquid into empty glasses. This approach
focuses on the activity of the instructor (is he or she covering all the material?).
Students are tested on their ability to regurgitate what the instructor said.

Learning, however, requires an active step on the part of the students and is best
measured by what these students are able to do with the material (the so-called
"learning outcomes"). In this view, the activity of the students is more important than
that of the instructor: Learning results from the interaction between the students and
the material to be learned — an interaction the instructor can catalyze.

This unit will help you prepare for, run, and evaluate effective classroom sessions as
part of a course. It will help you define learning outcomes and design learning
activities, create a classroom atmosphere that is conducive to student activity and
encourage this activity in all possible ways, reveal the structure of the course to the
students, and evaluate your performance as an instructor. It also provides tips on
managing large groups.

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