Scientific & Policy Writing
Science is not finished until it is communicated, and it is not useful until someone can act on it. A result that cannot be explained, a hypothesis that cannot be stated sharply, or a finding that never reaches the decision it bears on will not advance the field or the response.
This hub collects short, reusable references on the craft of writing, each pairing a skeleton with a worked infectious-disease example. The pages are meant to be assigned one at a time across courses, the same way the Quantitative Methods pages are. Two longer prose overviews anchor the collection: scientific writing covers the arc from a first question to a finished manuscript, and scientific pathways covers the research career and the funding system. The snippet pages below break that material into assignable pieces and add the half of communication that academic training usually leaves out — writing for the people who make decisions.
Writing is thinking made visible. It rewards practice and repetition as much as any statistical or laboratory skill.
Overviews#
- Scientific Writing — generating a hypothesis, Specific Aims, IMRaD, and reporting standards
- Scientific Pathways — the research career, fellowships, and grant writing
Foundations#
- The Craft of Writing — story structure, the paragraph, sentence energy, and flow
The manuscript, section by section#
- Writing an Introduction — the funnel from broad context to your question
- The Specific Aims Page — the single most important page of a grant
- Writing Methods — reproducibility as the test of a good Methods section
- Writing Results and Discussion — reporting what you found, then what it means
- Writing an Abstract — the miniature of the paper that almost everyone reads
Grants and funding#
- Grant Writing — how a proposal is framed for NIH versus NSF
- The Specific Aims Page — the grant’s argument on one page
Writing for decision-makers#
- Writing for Policy — turning a result into a brief a policymaker can use, grounded in Whitty (2015)
The publication conversation#
- Cover Letters and Reviewer Responses — the editor’s letter and the point-by-point reply
Where this connects#
The writing craft here runs alongside the rest of the site. Designing the figures that carry a Results section is covered in graphing data. Reproducibility, pre-registration, and sharing code are covered in reproducibility and experimental design. Writing for policy sits next to risk communication and community engagement and is assigned in People, Plagues, and Policy.