Admission requirements
Successful completion of Communication in Science 1 & 2.
Description
During the third year, students extend their writing and presentation skills. During the course Science Talks, the oral presentation skills appropriate to giving a paper to an international audience will be discussed and practiced, as well as linguistic aspects such as intonation, word stress and pronunciation of key words. Students will write a critical interpretation, a “Retort” in reaction to a philosophical article or review from a list relevant to the REOS module and give an oral presentation of the same article to their peers. Each student will write a full scientific report in English, as if for publication, on an experiment. In addition, students will write a training period article in English on their three-month student research project and discuss this in a peer review format. Each student will then have an individual tutorial with a CIS teacher to identify and work on individual writing issues. At the end of the year, a poster presentation will be held, during which all students present the results of their student research projects to their fellow students.
During the annual Biomedical Sciences Symposium, organised by Master’s students and supervised by CIS, students will gain insight into the research profiles of the LUMC; during this symposium, Master’s students present their research results in English to all Bachelor’s students.
Course objectives
The student:
presents numerical and graphical data to audience in text and in presentations
can summarize, synthesize and critically evaluate research papers
can define a research question and hypothesis, can provide a rational and identify a gap/niche in the literature
practices the skill of formal and concise writing
develops skills in critical analysis and communicating critique
practices using the language of argumentation in presentation and writing (in English)
can write a competent research paper in the form of a publishable article
uses analytical and communication skills to offer feedback on peers’ texts and receive feedback
learns to design and present a conference poster in English
can present coherently and convincingly
shows skills necessary to communicate his/her analysis of an article to a scientific audience
demonstrates ability to work independently on longer term projects, meet deadlines, and receive and assimilate feedback
Timetable
All course and group schedules are published on our LUMC scheduling website or on the LUMC scheduling app.
Mode of instruction
The line course Communication in Science (CIS) is a form of transmodular education that is integrated with the modules. CIS is taught via lectures, work groups, self-study, video training and individual tutorials. Students build up a portfolio containing all assessments and feedback. The course makes use of the electronic learning environment Blackboard.
Assessment method
CIS applies continuous assessment; the final mark for the year is the average of all individual marks for the written assignments, a formal oral presentation and a poster presentation.
Reading list
Registration
To participate in workgroups and exams students must register with uSis.