Foreword
Introduction: Explaining Your Research is a Professional
Necessity
Section I: Learning a New Communications Paradigm
1: Understand Your Audiences
2: Plan Your Research Communication Strategy
Section II: Effectively Reaching Your Peers
3: Give Compelling Talks
4: Develop Informative Visuals
5: Create Effective Poster Presentations
6: Write Clear Research Explanations
7: Build a Quality Web Site
Section III: Engaging Lay Audiences
8: Forge Your Research Communications Strategy
9: The Essential News Release
10: Craft Releases That Tell Your Research Story
11: Target Releases to Key Audiences
12: Produce Effective Research Photography
13: Produce Informative Research Videos
14: Organize Dynamic Multimedia Presentations
15: Create E-Newsletters, Wikis, Blogs, Podcasts, Social Networks,
and Webinars
16: Write Popular Articles, Op-Eds, and Essays
17: Author Popular Books
18: Become a Public Educator
19: Persuade Administrators, Donors, and Legislators
Section IV: Explaining Your Research Through the Media
20: Parse Publicity's Pros and Cons
21: Understand Journalists
22: Meet Journalists' Needs
23: Prepare for Media Interviews
24: Make the Interview Work For You
25: Protect Yourself from Communication Traps
26: Manage Media Communications at Scientific Meetings
27: Should You Be a Public Scientist?
Dennis Meredith's career as a science communicator has included service at some of the country's leading research universities, including MIT, Caltech, Cornell, Duke and the University of Wisconsin. He has worked with science journalists at all the nation's major newspapers, magazines, and radio and TV networks and has written thousands of news releases and magazine articles on science and engineering over his career.
"Meredith delivers an avalanche of guidance on every facet of
explaining research, from giving compelling Powerpoint
presentations to advising museum exhibits, shooting videos, writing
press releases, and talking with the media and with policymakers.
Explaining Resarch includes some astonishing and useful minutiae:
When writing for print or the Web, one should revise sentences that
contain too many short letters such as a, c and n, because its
easier
to read text that combines short letters with tall ones. Readers
are reminded to go to the bathroom before participating in Web
conferences, and to wear tall socks for television interviews, lest
their calves
peek out below their pant legs." -- American Scientist
"Research Explainer Meredith provides more than an expression of
opinion regarding the urgent need to reach the public and bridge
the gap in science. He provides data and information on the trends
that will be quite surprising to most scientists in his
"Introduction: Explaining Your Research Is a Professional
Necessity." The remainder of the book is a well thought out How-to
guideline for scientists who wish to create a communication
strategy that is effective
in today's world. [Meredith] creates a compelling case to motivate
scientists into action and he provides an authoritative guide to
show how it can be done. Any scientist in today's culture of
media
should have 'Explaining Research' on hand."--The Physiologist
"...a huge range of tools and techniques are presented and
successfully explained, with additional material available online
through Meredith's blog and website. The book is consistently
positive and encouraging, convincing the reader the step up and
engage with the public, balancing aspirational suggestions with
cautionary tales. Meredith wears his extensive experience lightly
and his engaging style and up-to-date material are sure to make
this book extremely
popular as the need to tailor research communication to new
audiences grows."--Analytical and Bioanalytical Chemistry
"During his 40-year career, veteran US science communicator Dennis
Meredith has written thousands of press releases and magazine
articles while serving a string of leading American universities.
In Explaining Research: How to Reach Key Audiences to Advance Your
Work Meredith distils this experience into a fabulous guide for
scientists seeking to communicate the fruits of their labours.
Meredith offers stacks of advice on everything from creating a
great website and crafting a well-written press release to
preparing online videos and writing a blog. It is inspiring stuff,
yet rooted in reality for example, Meredith provides useful
PowerPoint tips (F5 starts
a presentation; the space bar shifts to the next slide) and offers
a list of "thrifty" words that can substitute for long ones ("do"
not "perform", "end" not "terminate" and so on)."-- Physics
World
"An excellent guidebook, full of practical tips and advice and,
just as important, key things to avoid and illustration of how not
to do it, so that readers can, as the subheading says, 'reach key
audiences to advance their research'." --Chemistry World
"A highly readable compendium of techniques to get your message out
from a PR pro. No matter how good you are at gaining "mind-share",
you will learn something new from this book."
-- Brian Snow, NSA IAD Technical Director, 1996-2002
"It is so important for scientists and engineers to communicate
their work to the public no matter what field they are in.
Explaining Research provides great advice to those new to the
experience, and there's opportunity for the more experienced among
us to learn, too." -- Peter Agre, M.D., Nobel Laureate
"This book is what every scientist needs - a communication coach
who gives you the tools to succeed while simultaneously urging you
forward and cheering you on." -- Bruce Lewenstein, Professor of
Science Communication, Cornell University
"Explaining Research is a must-have, must-read not only for its
primary target audience, scientists, researchers, and engineers,
but also, given the new media landscape, for just about anyone
eager to enhance his/her science communication skills." -- Ben
Patrusky, Executive Director, Council for the Advancement of
Science Writing
Listed in Science Book News
"The author shares a wealth of experience and common sense in this
wide-ranging guide to communicating scientific research. Any
researcher who samples this book's 27 clearly titled chapters will
be better equipped to decide what is worth doing and how to get it
done."
-- Elizabeth Bass, The Quarterly Review of Biology
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