Viewing: Additional Reading and Resources
- Introduction
- How Science Works
- Sources and Experts: Where to Find Them and How to Vet Them
- Making Sense of Science Stats
- Editing for Story
- Editing Controversial Science
- Holding Science to Account
- Covering Health Care
- Climate and the Environment
- Fact-Checking Science Journalism: How to Make Sure Your Stories Are True
-
Illustrating Complex Science Stories
- Introduction
- The Role of Visuals in Science Journalism
- The Process of Building Science-Centric Graphics
- Strategies for Using Visuals to Put Breaking Science in Context
- Special Considerations for Data Visualization
- Uncertainty and Misinformation
- Editorial Illustration, Photography, and Moving Images
- Additional Reading and Resources
- About the Author
- Social Media and Reader Engagement
- Popular Science
- Misinformation
- Op-Eds and Essays
- About This Handbook
Additional Reading and Resources
- Naomi Oreskes and Erik Conway, Merchants of Doubt (2010), Bloomsbury Press
- Nathan Ballantyne and David Dunning, “Which Experts Should You Listen to During a Pandemic?” (Scientific American)
- Brian Deer, “How the Case Against the MMR Vaccine Was Fixed” (The BMJ)
- Retraction Watch, a source for examples of fraud or mistakes that make it into the scientific literature
- SciLine, a source for connections with experts, workshops, and fact sheets about controversial science subjects