Scientific Communication
Practices, Theories, and Pedagogies
Herausgeber: Yu, Han; Northcut, Kathryn M
Scientific Communication
Practices, Theories, and Pedagogies
Herausgeber: Yu, Han; Northcut, Kathryn M
- Broschiertes Buch
- Merkliste
- Auf die Merkliste
- Bewerten Bewerten
- Teilen
- Produkt teilen
- Produkterinnerung
- Produkterinnerung
This book addresses the roles and challenges of people who communicate science, who work with scientists, and who teach STEM majors how to write.
Andere Kunden interessierten sich auch für
- Rhetorical Agendas29,99 €
- Professing Rhetoric58,99 €
- Teachers on the Edge29,99 €
- David S KauferRhetoric and the Arts of Design65,99 €
- National Academies of Sciences Engineering and MedicineStatistical Challenges in Assessing and Fostering the Reproducibility of Scientific Results46,99 €
- Making and Unmaking the Prospects for Rhetoric55,99 €
- Rhetoric and Pedagogy71,99 €
-
-
-
This book addresses the roles and challenges of people who communicate science, who work with scientists, and who teach STEM majors how to write.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Routledge
- Seitenzahl: 324
- Erscheinungstermin: 30. September 2020
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 229mm x 152mm x 18mm
- Gewicht: 449g
- ISBN-13: 9780367889333
- ISBN-10: 0367889331
- Artikelnr.: 59995389
- Verlag: Routledge
- Seitenzahl: 324
- Erscheinungstermin: 30. September 2020
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 229mm x 152mm x 18mm
- Gewicht: 449g
- ISBN-13: 9780367889333
- ISBN-10: 0367889331
- Artikelnr.: 59995389
Han Yu is Professor of Technical Communication in the English Department, Kansas State University, USA. She is co-editor (with Gerald Savage) of Negotiating Cultural Encounters: Narrating Intercultural Engineering and Technical Communication, author of The Other Kind of Funnies: Comics in Technical Communication, and author of Communicating Genetics: Visualizations and Representations (forthcoming). Kathryn Northcut is a professor of technical communication in the Department of English and Technical Communication at Missouri S&T, USA. She teaches courses in technical communication at the undergraduate and graduate levels. She co-edited (with Eva Brumberger) Designing Texts: Teaching Visual Communication.
Part I: Practice and Theory
1. Shifting Networks of Science: Citizen Science and Scientific Genre
Change
Gwendoline Reid
2. Lines and Fields of Ethical Force in Scientific Authorship: The
Legitimacy and Power of the Office of Research Integrity
Steven B. Katz and C. Claiborne Linvill
3. Science vs. Science Commercialization: Conflicts and Ethics of
Information Sharing
Scott A. Mogull
4. Visualizing Science: Using Grounded Theory to Critically Evaluate Data
Visualizations
Candice A. Welhausen
5. The Tree of Life in Popular Science: Assumptions, Accuracy, and
Accessibility
Han Yu
6. Tweeting the Anthropocene: #400ppm as Networked Event
Lauren E. Cagle and Denise Tillery
7. From Questions of Fact to Questions of Policy and Beyond: Science Museum
Communication and the Possibilities of a Rhetorical Education
Gregory Schneider-Bateman
Part II: Pedagogy and Curriculum
8. Science and Writing: A Transectional Account of Pedagogical Species
Jonathan Buehl and William FitzGerald
9. Confronting the Objectivity Paradigm: A Rhetorical Approach to Teaching
Science Communication
Maria E. Gigante
10. Dissolving the Divide between Expert and Public: Improving the Science
Communication Service Course
Kate Maddalena and Colleen A. Reilly
11. A Rhetorical Approach to Scientific Communication Pedagogy in
Face-to-Face and Digital Contexts
Carleigh Davis and Erin A. Frost
12. MetaFeedback: A Model for Teaching Instructor Response to Student
Writing in the Sciences
Lindsey Harding and Liz Studer
13. Incorporating Wikipedia in the Classroom to Improve Science Learning
and Communication
Becky J. Carmichael and Metha M. Klock
1. Shifting Networks of Science: Citizen Science and Scientific Genre
Change
Gwendoline Reid
2. Lines and Fields of Ethical Force in Scientific Authorship: The
Legitimacy and Power of the Office of Research Integrity
Steven B. Katz and C. Claiborne Linvill
3. Science vs. Science Commercialization: Conflicts and Ethics of
Information Sharing
Scott A. Mogull
4. Visualizing Science: Using Grounded Theory to Critically Evaluate Data
Visualizations
Candice A. Welhausen
5. The Tree of Life in Popular Science: Assumptions, Accuracy, and
Accessibility
Han Yu
6. Tweeting the Anthropocene: #400ppm as Networked Event
Lauren E. Cagle and Denise Tillery
7. From Questions of Fact to Questions of Policy and Beyond: Science Museum
Communication and the Possibilities of a Rhetorical Education
Gregory Schneider-Bateman
Part II: Pedagogy and Curriculum
8. Science and Writing: A Transectional Account of Pedagogical Species
Jonathan Buehl and William FitzGerald
9. Confronting the Objectivity Paradigm: A Rhetorical Approach to Teaching
Science Communication
Maria E. Gigante
10. Dissolving the Divide between Expert and Public: Improving the Science
Communication Service Course
Kate Maddalena and Colleen A. Reilly
11. A Rhetorical Approach to Scientific Communication Pedagogy in
Face-to-Face and Digital Contexts
Carleigh Davis and Erin A. Frost
12. MetaFeedback: A Model for Teaching Instructor Response to Student
Writing in the Sciences
Lindsey Harding and Liz Studer
13. Incorporating Wikipedia in the Classroom to Improve Science Learning
and Communication
Becky J. Carmichael and Metha M. Klock
Part I: Practice and Theory
1. Shifting Networks of Science: Citizen Science and Scientific Genre
Change
Gwendoline Reid
2. Lines and Fields of Ethical Force in Scientific Authorship: The
Legitimacy and Power of the Office of Research Integrity
Steven B. Katz and C. Claiborne Linvill
3. Science vs. Science Commercialization: Conflicts and Ethics of
Information Sharing
Scott A. Mogull
4. Visualizing Science: Using Grounded Theory to Critically Evaluate Data
Visualizations
Candice A. Welhausen
5. The Tree of Life in Popular Science: Assumptions, Accuracy, and
Accessibility
Han Yu
6. Tweeting the Anthropocene: #400ppm as Networked Event
Lauren E. Cagle and Denise Tillery
7. From Questions of Fact to Questions of Policy and Beyond: Science Museum
Communication and the Possibilities of a Rhetorical Education
Gregory Schneider-Bateman
Part II: Pedagogy and Curriculum
8. Science and Writing: A Transectional Account of Pedagogical Species
Jonathan Buehl and William FitzGerald
9. Confronting the Objectivity Paradigm: A Rhetorical Approach to Teaching
Science Communication
Maria E. Gigante
10. Dissolving the Divide between Expert and Public: Improving the Science
Communication Service Course
Kate Maddalena and Colleen A. Reilly
11. A Rhetorical Approach to Scientific Communication Pedagogy in
Face-to-Face and Digital Contexts
Carleigh Davis and Erin A. Frost
12. MetaFeedback: A Model for Teaching Instructor Response to Student
Writing in the Sciences
Lindsey Harding and Liz Studer
13. Incorporating Wikipedia in the Classroom to Improve Science Learning
and Communication
Becky J. Carmichael and Metha M. Klock
1. Shifting Networks of Science: Citizen Science and Scientific Genre
Change
Gwendoline Reid
2. Lines and Fields of Ethical Force in Scientific Authorship: The
Legitimacy and Power of the Office of Research Integrity
Steven B. Katz and C. Claiborne Linvill
3. Science vs. Science Commercialization: Conflicts and Ethics of
Information Sharing
Scott A. Mogull
4. Visualizing Science: Using Grounded Theory to Critically Evaluate Data
Visualizations
Candice A. Welhausen
5. The Tree of Life in Popular Science: Assumptions, Accuracy, and
Accessibility
Han Yu
6. Tweeting the Anthropocene: #400ppm as Networked Event
Lauren E. Cagle and Denise Tillery
7. From Questions of Fact to Questions of Policy and Beyond: Science Museum
Communication and the Possibilities of a Rhetorical Education
Gregory Schneider-Bateman
Part II: Pedagogy and Curriculum
8. Science and Writing: A Transectional Account of Pedagogical Species
Jonathan Buehl and William FitzGerald
9. Confronting the Objectivity Paradigm: A Rhetorical Approach to Teaching
Science Communication
Maria E. Gigante
10. Dissolving the Divide between Expert and Public: Improving the Science
Communication Service Course
Kate Maddalena and Colleen A. Reilly
11. A Rhetorical Approach to Scientific Communication Pedagogy in
Face-to-Face and Digital Contexts
Carleigh Davis and Erin A. Frost
12. MetaFeedback: A Model for Teaching Instructor Response to Student
Writing in the Sciences
Lindsey Harding and Liz Studer
13. Incorporating Wikipedia in the Classroom to Improve Science Learning
and Communication
Becky J. Carmichael and Metha M. Klock