000 03811nam a2200277 i 4500
003 MIUC
005 20200109154245.0
008 161216s2014 enk||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d
020 _a9781907076633
040 _aMIUC
_beng
_cMIUC
082 0 _a808.06
245 0 0 _a53 interesting ways to communicate your research /
_cEdited by Irenee Daly and Aoife Brophy Haney.
246 3 _aFifty-three interesting ways to communicate your research
260 _aSuffolk :
_bProfessional and Higher Partnership,
_c2014.
300 _axvi, 117 p. ;
_c22 cm.
490 0 _aProfessional and Higher Education ;
_v5
504 _aIncludes bibliographical references and index.
505 0 _aCh. 1. Communicating within academia -- 1. Posters – graphical research connection -- 2. Abstracts – more than a final thought -- 3. Academic interviews -- 4. Key terms – make them work for you -- 5. Twitter as conferencing tools -- 6. Conference networking – building a net that works -- 7. Responding to peer reviewers -- 8. Turn your thesis into a book -- 9. Copyright – know where you stand -- 10. Webinars -- 11. Share a conference paper using YouTube -- 12. Share your research process via social media -- 13. Open access publishing -- 14. How to use your research in a lecture -- 15. Turn your thesis into something other than a book -- 16. How to teach project management using your research -- Ch. 2. Communicating beyond academia -- 17. Writing op-eds -- 18. Radio interviews -- 19. Public engagement -- 20. Writing press releases -- 21. Writing engaging lay summaries -- 22. Non-academic interviews -- 23. Information sheets – what research participants need to know -- 24. Public engagement – drama meets research -- 25. Recruiting research participants through social media -- 26. Turn research outputs into stakeholder tools -- 27. Stand-up comedy for researchers -- 28. Marketing your research -- 29. Engaging with think tanks -- Ch. 3. General techniques -- 30. CVs – conversation vitae? -- 31. Podcasting -- 32. Vocal exercises for presenting – speak up! -- 33. Social media strategy -- 34. Storytelling – present your research in three acts -- 35. Blogging -- 36. Online networking -- 37. Professional personal profiles -- 38. Multi-author blogs -- 39. Presenting – know your audience -- 40. Images in presentations -- 41. Cover letters that do the job -- 42. Objects – making your presentations -- 43. Taking the stress out of preserving -- 44. Lights, camera, conference! Using video to communicate your research -- 45. Slides – rehearse the transitions -- 46. Infographics – worth more than a thousand words? -- 47. Twitter – your research in 140 characters -- 48. Guest blogging -- 49. Crowdsourcing -- 50. Digital curation – collecting and sharing -- 51. Demonstrating how your research makes you employable -- 52. Body language -- 53. Mastering Q sessions.
520 _aTo maximize the value of your research, you need to communicate it to others. There are many ways to do so: examples include applications and bids, conference presentations, gray literature, journal papers, media (old and new), public talks, and teaching. This book provides fresh, creative, ways of making the most of these and other opportunities. It provides 53 practical suggestions, each based on ideas tried and tested by the contributors. Key terms:communication; impact; presenting; publication; public engagement; research; social media; writing.
650 0 _92802
_aCommunication in science
650 0 _92803
_aScholarly publishing
650 0 _92804
_aTechnical writing
700 1 _4edt
_92805
_aDaly, Irenee
700 1 _4edt
_92806
_aHaney, Aoife Brophy,
_d1981-
942 _2ddc
_cBK