selfAdjoint
Staff Emeritus
Gold Member
Dearly Missed
- 6,843
- 11
Moonbear said:I tell my students that that's probably the most difficult skill to learn as a scientist. It's easy to talk to other scientists about what you do, because they understand the terminology and have the background so you can omit things and they'll still keep up, but to explain what you do to a non-scientist in a way that does not confuse them and does not misinform them and does not patronize, that's really very challenging to learn to do. It's certainly something to practice though, because you will have to do it.
There needs to be an intermediate level of explainer; some one who is very good with language, and sufficiently expert in the field that he doesn't make boners ( the explanatory books/articles should also be vetted by scientist in the field, a sort of sub-fusc peer review). There is no reason to expect - in fact regression on the mean drives our expectations against - that someone who is good in a science discipline will also be a talented explainer.