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Science Communication Principles

Environmental Science
StudyPulse

Science Communication Principles

Environmental Science
01 May 2026

Science Communication in Environmental Science

Effective science communication is essential for translating research findings into usable knowledge for diverse audiences. In VCE Environmental Science, students must communicate their investigation findings through a scientific poster, using conventions appropriate to scientific publication.

Why Science Communication Matters

Scientific knowledge only influences environmental management and policy if it is communicated effectively to:
- Other scientists (for peer review, replication, building on findings)
- Policy-makers (for evidence-based decisions)
- Community members (for public understanding and engagement)
- Media (for broad dissemination)

Different audiences require different communication styles, levels of technical detail and formats.

Core Principles of Scientific Communication

Principle Description
Clarity Unambiguous language; no jargon without definition
Conciseness Communicate the essential content without unnecessary elaboration
Precision Use exact quantitative language where possible (‘increased by 23%’ not ‘increased a lot’)
Coherence Ideas flow logically from observation → analysis → conclusion
Accuracy All factual statements, data and references must be correct
Audience appropriateness Technical detail matched to the knowledge level of the intended reader

Scientific Conventions

Terminology

  • Use correct scientific names (binomials) for organisms: Eucalyptus regnans (not ‘mountain ash’)
  • Define technical terms on first use if the audience may not know them
  • Use SI units consistently: metres (m), kilograms (kg), degrees Celsius (°C), parts per million (ppm)

Symbols and Formulas

  • Use standard chemical formulas: CO$_2$, CH$_4$, N$_2$O
  • Use standard mathematical symbols: $\sum$, $\alpha$, $\sigma$, %
  • Scientific notation for very large/small numbers: \$6.02 \times 10^{23}$

Units of Measurement

  • Always include units with numerical data
  • Use abbreviations consistently (m/s or ms$^{-1}$; g/L or g L$^{-1}$)
  • Report measurements with appropriate significant figures

Referencing

  • All external sources must be cited using a consistent referencing style (APA or scientific journal style)
  • Distinguish between your own data and cited sources
  • Use in-text citations linked to a reference list

Written Scientific Genres

Genre Key Features VCE Context
Scientific report Structured: abstract, introduction, methods, results, discussion, conclusion Unit 4 AOS 3 investigation
Scientific poster Visual summary: concise text + figures + key findings Primary communication output for AOS 3 investigation
Case study analysis Identifies a real-world scenario; applies frameworks; evaluates evidence Unit 3 AOS 2
Data commentary Describes trends in data; links observations to theory Common in exam responses

Key Distinction: Describing vs. Explaining

VCAA examination questions often require students to explain rather than just describe:
- Describe: State what was observed (‘CO$_2$ concentrations increased between 1960 and 2020’)
- Explain: State what was observed AND provide the mechanism (‘CO$_2$ concentrations increased between 1960 and 2020 because combustion of fossil fuels releases carbon dioxide that was stored in geological formations over millions of years’)

A common student error is describing results without explaining the underlying process.

STUDY HINT: Before the exam, practise converting bullet-point knowledge into clear, connected sentences. Environmental science assessors reward responses that demonstrate understanding of mechanisms, not just recall of facts. Use technical vocabulary accurately and define terms where the context suggests they may be unfamiliar to the examiner.

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