An Instrument for Assessing Scientists’ Written Skills in Public Communication of Science

January 22nd, 2013 | RESEARCH

This article describes the development of the first tool for measuring scientists' written skills in public communication of science. It includes the rationale for establishing learning goals in seven areas: clarity and language, content, knowledge organization, style, analogy, narrative, and dialogue, as well as the questions designed to assess these goals. The skills testing is primarily designed for assessing written communication skills and can be used in many science communication training contexts. It can serve as a baseline survey, a formative assessment, or in summative pretest/posttest evaluations. The article provides detailed criteria for analyzing the results of the instrument as well as findings from baseline data collected from science graduate and undergraduate students.

Document

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Team Members

Ayelet Baram-Tsabari, Author, Cornell University
Bruce Lewenstein, Author, Cornell University

Citation

Identifier Type: DOI
Identifier: 10.1177/1075547012440634

Publication: Science Communication
Volume: 35
Number: 56

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Tags

Audience: Evaluators | Scientists
Discipline: General STEM
Resource Type: Peer-reviewed article | Research Products
Environment Type: Media and Technology