Page 25 - Periodic ISSUE 8
P. 25

In
         form, Inspire, Engage




 Jess Fleming (Lincoln 2016) writes about a project to help students
 communicate their research.



 What links birds, drum kits and interstellar   text designed to communicate a complex idea in
 gas clouds? All featured in the department’s   an accessible and engaging manner. A well-known
 infographics project, launched for the first time   example is Compound Interest, run by Andy Brunning,
 this academic year.  which features an extensive library covering the
 chemistry in everything from porridge to nail polish.
 In October last year, 20 Part II students were brought
 together with the challenge of using this novel format   Unfortunately, the typical format of a journal article is
 to communicate their research to a wider audience.   hardly conducive to public engagement. Instead, the
 After some initial training in science communication,   “inverted triangle” approach is encouraged: start with
 the students had two weeks to produce an infographic   the findings, move onto the method then briefly cover
 to be shared with their peers in a Q&A session at the   the background. Text should be concise and replaced
 Chemistry Teaching Laboratory.  with simple diagrams wherever possible. The number
 one rule? Be ruthless! It’s time to decide what really
 The word itself gives a clue to its function:   matters.
 infographic = information + graphics. An infographic
 is a combination of charts, images and minimal



             Simplifying your science can be a lot harder than   mix of groups were brought together to share their
             it sounds. Randall Monroe’s book “Thing Explainer”   science and become more confident communicators,
             uses only the 1000 most common English words to   hopefully inspired to do more public engagement work
             describe topics including chemistry’s periodic table.   in the future. One participant said “the infographic
             In his version, fluorine becomes “green burning air   writing helped me better understand my Part II
             that kills” and sulphur is “smelly yellow rocks”! Whilst   research by making me summarise and present it as
             it wasn’t necessary to go quite this far, eliminating the   simply as possible to explain it to a non-scientist. It
             jargon is key to a successful infographic.       was also a helpful insight into scientific communication
                                                              that stood me in good stead to start the huge task of
             The students’ creations have now become part of   writing a thesis”.
             the department’s wider outreach work. They were
             displayed at the department’s annual alumni reception   The project is currently at the pilot stage, organised
             at the Royal Society of Chemistry (RSC) and have   by Richard Cooper, Martin Galpin and Saskia O’Sullivan
             been used in wider training activities. Given that   with a view to expanding it further next year. See the
             a recent RSC survey found roughly half the public   images for some examples of the students’ output
             don’t feel confident discussing chemistry, clearly   so far.
             outreach work is as important as ever. It prevents
             disinformation, inspires the next generation and
             boosts funding for research.                     Find out more or have a go:
                                                              https://www.compoundchem.com/
             The participants themselves also benefited from being   Thing Explainer by Randall Moore
             challenged to think about their research in a new way   https://www.rsc.org/campaigning-outreach/
             and really understand the fundamentals of it. A diverse  outreach/public-attitudes-chemistry/






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