Science & Technology Communication
Common Core – Sience
Introduction to Sci-Tech Communication
Effective communication in science and technology requires clarity, precision, and adaptability to different audiences. This unit covers essential strategies for presenting technical information.
Key Aspects
• Technical accuracy
• Audience adaptation
• Visual support
Formats
Reports
Presentations
Documentation
Skills
Data visualization
Jargon management
Storytelling
1. Technical Report Writing
Structure
- Title & Abstract
- Introduction
- Methods
- Results
- Discussion
- Conclusion
Visual Guide
Exercise:
Convert these technical specifications into layman’s terms:
“The device operates at 5GHz frequency with 64-bit quad-core architecture, delivering 3.2 TFLOPS computational throughput.”
2. Effective Sci-Tech Presentations
Slide Design Principles
1-1-7 Rule:
1 idea per slide
1 visual aid
7 lines max
CRAP Principles:
Contrast, Repetition, Alignment, Proximity
Delivery Techniques
• 3-second rule (pause after key points)
• Eye contact distribution
• Hand gesture zones
• Vocal variety techniques
Interactive Example:
Quantum Computing Basics
Qubits vs classical bits
Key principles that enable quantum advantage
3. Communicating Data
Data Storytelling Framework:
Context:
Why this data matters
Comparison:
Relative differences
Causation:
Possible reasons
Visualization Exercise:
Choose the best chart type for these data scenarios:
Market share comparison
Temperature changes over time
4. Ethics in Sci-Tech Communication
Common Pitfalls
• Cherry-picking data
• Oversimplification
• Hype terminology
• Hidden conflicts of interest
Case Study
Discussion Prompt:
“How would you communicate uncertain scientific findings without misleading the audience?”