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Science Writing Prize 2014 – How to write a news story from a scientific paper

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Wellcome Trust Science Writing Prize 2014

The Wellcome Trust Science Writing Prize 2014 launches today and to help inspire your entries we’re publishing a series of “How to” blogs here on the Wellcome Trust blog. Over the next few weeks we’ll be covering a range of topics, including how to conduct an interview, how to write a feature, and how to pitch to editors. The prize is run in association with The Guardian and The Observer and so start us off, and to help you in your search for the perfect story for your entry, The Guardian’s Science Correspondent Ian Sample shares his tips on how to write a news story from a research paper.

Most journalists want to break exclusives, but a lot of what scientist journalists write is based on the latest findings published in academic journals. So here are some guidelines on how to write a great news story from a research paper.

1. Find a good paper

Thousands of scientific papers are published each week. The majority will not make good news stories. Look for work that is entertaining, fascinating, important or controversial. Ask yourself: will anyone care? Be brutal about this. Move on if the answer is no.

2. Read it

You cannot cover a paper properly without reading it. The abstract will give the barest essentials. You need to read the introduction for context, the discussion and conclusions for take-home messages. Check the methods. Was the experiment well designed? Was it large enough to draw conclusions from? Find weaknesses and flaws. You will probably need help to work out how fatal they are. Spend time on the results. Have the authors omitted key data? Look at odds ratios, error bars, fitted curves and statistical significances. Are the results robust? Do they back up the scientists’ conclusions? Remember: nematodes, fruit flies and mice are not humans, and what happens in a Petri dish won’t necessarily happen in a person. Read the supplementary material too. You will find gems.

3. Vested interests

Check for conflicts of interest. These should be declared at the end of the paper, but make your own checks too. Plenty of scientists have financial links with companies. The reader might want to know about them.

4. Get context

Science builds on science. Know the previous studies that matter so you can paint a fuller picture. If your story is about chimps in Guinea using cleavers and anvils, you might mention the different tools that chimps in the Republic of Congo use for termite fishing.

5. Interview the authors

Write from the paper alone and your news story will be dull. Interviews with authors will give you the colour to tell a story. How did the face transplant patient react when they looked in the mirror? What possessed the authors to study spiders on cocaine? How did it feel to unearth the remnants of an ancient hearth, knowing a Neanderthal sat in the same spot 40,000 years ago?

Get them to explain their results and justify their conclusions. What do the results mean in plain English? What do they not mean? Ask your questions in simple language to get answers you can quote. Run phrases you might use past the authors, so they can warn you of howlers. Do not ask multi-part questions: you will not get full answers.

Remember that papers can take months to appear in journals, so find out how the work has moved on since the work was submitted.

Think about whom you want to interview. First authors are generally the graduate students or postdocs who did all the work. Last authors are often senior scientists. On a good day, a senior author will give you the clearest explanation, the perfect quote, and the richest context. On a bad day, they will have no recollection of the paper their name appears on.

6. Get other scientists’ opinions

Send the paper to a handful of experts to check. You will find people in the paper’s references, or on Google Scholar. Chat about the paper on the phone. Some scientists will email you thick paragraphs of reaction. You might salvage a sentence or two, but email makes for clunky quotes: people do not speak the way they write. Ask your expert if the work looks sound or flakey. What does it add? What is the striking result? Will it be controversial? What fresh questions does it raise? Comments from other scientists will always improve your story. They will also save you from writing a story you wish you had never touched.

 7. Find the top line

You’ve read the paper, interviewed the authors and discussed the work with other experts. Now you need to find the top line. One option is what drew you to the paper in the first place. But there will be others. Go over your interviews. What stood out as most fascinating, alarming, amusing, or important? Does it make for a stronger angle? Bear in mind that the story you should tell your readers might not be the story the authors want you to tell your readers.

8. Remember who you are writing for

The reader may be clever and curious about the world. But do not assume they are scientists, or that they have time to read boring, unimportant or incoherent stories. Make your story clear and informed. Science can be hard enough without the technical terms, so use simple words. Do not patronise the reader. Respect them and be honest. Make them glad they read you.

9. Be right

Don’t write a story that is wrong. This is harder than it sounds. Most scientific papers are wrong, thanks to poor study designs, author biases, small sample sizes and other problems. So don’t make things worse by introducing errors of your own. Check everything. Mistakes leave readers confused and misinformed. They will undermine your credibility too. Call a shrew a rodent and your soricid story is ruined.

 10. Write well

Reporters often pick the same papers to cover. Why should anyone read you? You must have something to add. Make an effort to get the details that readers want to know. And learn how to write well. Find a clear path through the story and build one paragraph after another in logical order. Stick to one idea for each paragraph. Read Strunk and White until you can hear them tutting as your type. Even the shortest stories can be memorable in the hands of a good writer.

In a nutshell:

Do

• Speak to the authors and get independent comment from scientists in the same field
• Get your facts straight

Don’t

• Patronise your readers
• Mistake fruit flies, mice or Petri dishes for people

 

Find out more about the Science Writing Prize and how to enter by visiting the prize pages on the Wellcome Trust website. The competition is open from today and you’ve got until 11th May 2014 to submit your entry for the prize. The Wellcome Trust is committed to supporting the next generation of science journalists.

The Wellcome Trust Science Writing Prize 2014 is held in association with the Guardian and the Observer. Wellcome Trust Science Writing Prize 2014 in association with the Guardian and the Observer


Filed under: Competition, SciComms How to..., Science Communication, Wellcome Trust Science Writing Prize Tagged: How to, Ian Sample, Science Journalism, SWP2014, Wellcome Trust Science Writing Prize

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