Panpacific
University North Philippines
Urdaneta City
College
of Teacher Education
Discussant : DELIZO, Lorelie M.
Course : BSE – 4 English
Subject
: Campus Journalism
SCIENCE WRITING
- is
the latest form of Philippine Journalism.
Ø A science
writer should be able to communicate clearly and effectively so that he
can popularize and translate scientific reports into stories.
Science
News Writing Covers:
1.) Science News
2.) Science Editorial
3.) Science Feature
4.) Science Column Writing
Science News Reporting
Ø Is science
writing by a scientist or by a non-scientist for mass consumption.
Ø His report is written for mass understanding.
Ø He writes his story in such a way that the science
un-oriented reader may understand and appreciate it because it is written in
layman’s language.
Ø He writes his story in such a way that the science
un-oriented reader may understand and appreciate it because it is written in
layman’s language.
Technical Writing vs.
Non-technical Writing:
• the objective of technical writing is to
emphasize hand information
• The
main aim of journalistic writing is to inform, interpret, entertain, and to
educate.
• Purpose
of Technical Writing
-
The main purpose of
technical writing is to inform and persuade by providing facts and opinion
based on facts that help readers answer question, solve a problem, make a
decision, or perform a task.
• Characteristics
of Technical Writing:
- It contains only factual information presented objectively.
- All data could be verified and would not change unless new findings are made.
- The writing depends on the author’s treatment of the subject and by the reader’s need to useful information.
- Technical subject is specialized and usually mechanical or scientific.
• Specific Uses of Technical Writing Skills:
-
Modern society is becoming highly technical
-
Police and fire personnel write detailed
incidents or investigation report that must be clear enough to serve as
evidence in court.
-
Nurses and medical technicians keep daily
records that are crucial to patients’ welfare particularly as bases for
litigations
-
Secretaries must write clear and precise memos,
letters, minutes, and reports.
-
Managers write memos, personal evaluation,
requisitions, and instructions.
• Writing for Readers:
- To define something – as to insurance costumer who wants to know what variable annuity means.
- To explain something – as to a fellow teacher on how to write a news story.
- To describe something – as to an architectural client who wants to know what a new addition to her home look s like.
- To persuade someone – like to an adviser of a school paper to change page format.
* Do’s
and Don’ts in Technical writing
- Omit no key words
- Avoid ambiguous phrases – in technical writing, a sentence should have one meaning only.
- Avoid over-stuffing – a sentence that crams so many ideas, forces readers to struggle in order to get what is meant.
- Avoid un-stacked modifiers – too many nouns stacked up as modifiers in front of another noun make for hard reading.
- Rearrange word order – just as any paragraph has a key sentence, any sentence has a key word or phrase. For emphasis, place the key word or phrase at the beginning or end of the sentence.
- Use the active voice
- Make sentences concise (brief) – a concise sentence is brief but informative. It gets right to the point w/o clutter.
- Eliminate redundancy – avoid using phrase when a word will do.
- Avoid needless repetition
- Avoid “there” sentence openers – save words and improve your emphasis by avoiding “there is” and “there are” at the beginning of the sentences.
11. Avoid certain “it”
sentence openers – eliminate any ”It” that does not refer to somerthing
specific.
12. Delete needless “to be”
construction – forms of the verb “to be” (is, was, are) often
add clutter w/o adding meaning.
13. Avoid excessive
prepositions
14. Use “that and “which”
sparingly
15. Fight noun addiction – excessive nouns make sentences awkward and wordy
16. Make negative positive – save words and get to the point by eliminating negative
construction.
17. Clear out the clutter
words
18. Delete needless preface – get to
the point. Deliver to the point w/o a long wind-up.
19. Avoid triteness
20. Avoid over-statement
21. Avoid sweeping generalization
22. Use specific, concrete language.
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