Use of Scientific Language by University Physics Students Communicating to the Public Documents

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Use of Scientific Language by University Physics Students Communicating to the Public 

written by Kathleen A. Hinko, Jordan Seneca, and Noah D. Finkelstein

Communicating to non-expert audiences about advanced physics topics and current research is an essential practice for physicists. Typical language used by physicists speaking to other physicists, however, draws on a wealth of prior knowledge and community norms; using such scientific language with public audiences can be a barrier to effective communication. Drawing from observations and literature, we present a framework for the assessment of scientific language of physics students communicating scientific meaning to non-expert audiences. We apply this framework to the analysis of videos of university physics students instructed to describe their research to children. We classify the types of scientific language used by students and identify strategies they employ to mitigate the impact of jargon on the audience.

Last Modified April 24, 2015

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