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Thermodynamic diagrams for free

May 29, 2011   Filed under Blog, Featured, Popular, Potpourri, Resources  

Upon packing up my house in Oklahoma, I discovered a small stash of Skew T–logp thermodynamic diagrams that I had saved when Charlie Crisp cleaned out his office at NSSL. (I also have a huge stash of blank U.S. surface maps, in case anyone is interested in them.) Geraint Vaughan at Manchester had been lamenting […]

How science progresses (a cynical viewpoint)

May 29, 2011   Filed under Blog, Featured, Humor, Potpourri, Presentations  

This is one of the most hilarious movies I’ve seen about how science works (or doesn’t work, as the case may be). Although it is a discussion between two physicists, you can imagine your favorite subdisciplines in your own field interacting this way.

New “Eloquent” article now published

May 26, 2011   Filed under Articles, Blog, Featured, News, Writing  

Following up on a previous post, “Occluded fronts and the occlusion process: A fresh look at conventional wisdom” has now been published in BAMS. Download it here.

Offensive and Defensive Writing: The Secret to Getting Your Manuscript Published?

May 21, 2011   Filed under Blog, Featured, Reviewing, Writing  

In a recent email conversation with my friend John Knox, he mentioned a game that he played by trying to spot the parts of the text in a scientific article that the author added specifically to address reviewers’ concerns. I have to admit to playing the same game at times. John’s point was that the […]

Dump the tilde

May 21, 2011   Filed under Blog, Featured, Writing  

I am an Assistant Editor at the Electronic Journal of Severe Storms Meteorology. As we have no paid staff, we depend upon authors to send us manuscripts that are near-ready to publish. The rest of the work we do ourselves, including much of the layout, technical and copy editing, and Web pages. For all that, […]

Writing Advice from William Safire

May 21, 2011   Filed under Blog, Featured, Humor, Writing  

Dave Jorgensen sent me this wonderful piece of writing advice from author, columnist, and presidential speechwriter William Safire. 1. No sentence fragments. 2. It behooves us to avoid archaisms. 3. Also, avoid awkward or affected alliteration. 4. Don’t use no double negatives. 5. If I’ve told you once, I’ve told you a thousand times, “Resist […]

Flattering review in Polar Research

May 11, 2011   Filed under Blog, Featured, News  

Kevin R. Wood of the Joint Institute for the Study of the Atmosphere and Ocean, University of Washington, has written a flattering review in Polar Research. Here are some excerpts. …at the time of my first reading of Eloquent science, I was rewriting a paper that had not, shall we say, passed gracefully through the […]

Are students prepared for university-level writing?

May 11, 2011   Filed under Blog, Featured, Potpourri, Writing  

Kim Brooks has this essay “Death to High School English” published in Salon.com. She details her experiences with finding students who don’t know the basics of writing: composition, structure, thesis statements, grammar, punctuation, and plagiarism. My own experiences here in the UK with final-year environmental-science majors were remarkably similar to hers, so the problem isn’t […]

Why does nothing this interesting ever happen at any conferences I attend?

May 11, 2011   Filed under Blog, Featured, Humor, Presentations  

From the Huffington Post: Guerrilla improv troupe Improv Everywhere struck again last month at GEL Conference, the annual gathering of tech/social media/business voices in New York City. With the help of GEL founder Mark Hurst, the covert entertainers pulled off one of their signature “Spontaneous Musicals” at the top of Hurst’s presentation. Just as he […]

The Increasing Number of Open-Access Publishers: A Good Thing?

April 23, 2011   Filed under Blog, Featured, Potpourri, Writing  

As a specialist in your field of research, we are pleased to invite you to contribute to our forthcoming Open Access book, XXXXXX. The book will be published by XXXXXX, Open Access publisher of books and journals in the fields of science, technology and medicine. XXXXX is a pioneer in the publication of Open Access […]

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