10 Rules for writing science

I am currently attending a course on ‘Academic Writing’. This is for scholars who want to write academic / scholarly articles. Such work usually gets published in journals. Journals are usually read by other scholars to know, collaborate, and take forward humanity’s knowledge on a subject. As I was reading through number of books and papers, I accidentally landed up on a journal editorial which shared 10 rules for writing science. I am listing the rules as they are so succinctly put. I am sharing the link to the original article for a more detailed account on each of these rules.


Rule 1: Keep It Short


Rule 2: Keep It Compact


Rule 3: Keep It Simple


Rule 4: Use the Present Tense


Rule 5: Avoid Adjectives and Adverbs


Rule 6: Focus


Rule 7: Signal Novelty and Importance


Rule 8: Be Bold


Rule 9: Show Confidence


Rule 10: Avoid Evocative Words


Article titled “Ten Simple (Empirical) Rules for Writing Science” by Cody J. Weinberger, James A. Evans, Stefano Allesina


Link: http://journals.plos.org/ploscompbiol/article?id=10.1371/journal.pcbi.1004205


Happy Reading and Writing (eventually)!


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Published on May 12, 2015 21:31
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