Storytelling techniques for scientific writing
13 & 27 March 2020
Important: the part of the course scheduled for March 27 will be replaced by online teaching.
Objectives
This workshop aims at helping PhD students develop narrative skills to improve the overall structure and style of their scientific articles. It focuses on what we intuitively name the “story” behind a scientific research and explores different ways to tell it to a readership. By the end of the workshop, students should have developed a better understanding of the narrative dimension of scientific article writing, experienced the effect of different narrative angles on the same set of results and used a method to keep narrative coherence throughout an article.
Speaker
- Diego Gonzalez, University of Neuchâtel
Content
This workshop is divided in two half-day sessions, one theoretical, one more practical. The first session will focus on concepts and methods relevant to scientific storytelling, especially the specificities of scientific “stories” and the importance of the narrative and conceptual angles chosen to communicate a research. In between the two sessions, the students will be asked to use these tools to write one or more abstracts about their own research topics. The second session will build on the abstracts written by the students and propose ways to improve them.
Here are some of the topics that will be addressed:
1. Scientific “stories”: elements of history, similarities with narrative fictions and specificities.
2. Readership: impact of the scientific field and target journal on the conceptual framework and style.
3. Conceptual angle: what is it? how to change or improve it? how to adapt it to a specific readership?
4. Narrative coherence: a progressive method to achieve narrative and conceptual coherence.
Requirements for attending the workshop
Since the practical part of the workshop will be based on the participants’ research and results, applicants should have at least one article ready for publication or at a fairly advanced stage by the time the workshop takes place.
General information
Dates: 13 & 27 March 2020 (2 half days)
Schedule: 8.55-12.00
Venue: University of Neuchâtel, Faculté des Sciences, Emile-Argand 11, UniMail, building A, room A218
ECTS: 0.5 (Communication)
Evaluation: Full attendance and active participation
Information: Please contact Dr. Diego Gonzales. For administrative matters, contact the doctoral program coordinator.
Registration fee: the course is free. No meal expenses reimbursement.
Travel expenses: For participants of the Interuniversity doctoral program in organismal biology (DPOB ): see reimbursement conditions
Make sure to sign the attendance sheet each and every day and to take your certificate of attendance at the end of the course (no certificate will be sent by mail)
Registration
- This course is free and open to all PhD students, however until 13 February 2020 priority is given to "Interuniversity doctoral program in organismal biology" participants.
- Post-docs are welcome as long as places are available.
- Maximum number of participants: 10 people (minimum 7 people).
Registration through the web only: CLOSED! The course is FULL !
Please note the cancellation policy (CHF 20).
Deadline: 29 February 2020