DSNFPS-RSDFPF/Contributing Articles

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Revision as of 16:22, 3 December 2020 by Reginald.maltais2 (talk | contribs) (Added explanations and examples.)
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Before You Start

Writing an article requires careful consideration of multiple factors to ensure that your readers will find it interesting enough to read it all the way through.

Before you write anything, ask yourself these questions to help you focus your message:

  1. For whom am I writing?
    • The network is for anyone working as, with or supervising a data scientist. There are executives, HR, training, and other communities who are trying to support the use of data science in the public service without being data scientists themselves.
    • Write to the target audience. There will often be overlap between multiple groups in the target audience, but there is no need to target all subscribers with every article.
  2. What is the message I want to convey?
    • What is the ‘take home’ message?
    • Make your point as early as possible, then reinforce it and expand throughout the article.
  3. How would I summarise the article?
    • The newsletter is only going to have a short description to be able to draw people towards your article.
    • If you cannot summarise the post then it may need indicate a need to reduce the scope or focus the ideas.
  4. Do readers need any special knowledge?
    • Requiring special knowledge is fine, but it needs to be clear to readers if they are going to understand the topic.
    • Rather than explaining some of the more basic concepts, link to materials that readers can use to get up to speed.
  5. What is this adding to the conversation?
    • The Values and Ethics Code for the Public Sector plays a role in the decision to publish an article. If the article is repeating something that exists elsewhere, it is potentially a better use of time and money to highlight the external source rather than recreate an article.

Article Types

Articles fall into different categories depending on their intent. While there is overlap between the different types of articles, it is important to be consistent in your approach and wording to provide a consistent experience.

For our purposes, the different types of articles are:

  • Tutorial (learning oriented)
  • How-to guide (problem oriented)
  • Explanations (understanding oriented)
  • Reference (information oriented)

Tutorials take a lot of effort to maintain, and therefore do not lend themself to the type of material the network is trying to produce for the blog.

Articles may be trying to explain a concept or series of steps. Ensure that your approach to the concept falls into a single article type throughout the text, and does not confuse the reader as to your intent. Mixing different types of articles makes it harder for the reader to understand your intent, as it is unclear if you are trying to educate them or asking them to follow along in a series of steps.

Get to Writing

With the beginning questions answered you can get to writing. There are a few things to keep in mind while writing though.

Structure

It is important that your article have a beginning, middle, and end. This sounds simple, but if often hard to actually put into practice.

Introduction

The first couple of paragraphs are what will entice the reader to keep reading. This needs to convey the context of the article and how it fits into their existing compendium of knowledge. Make sure you communicate to the reader what value they will derive from reading the rest of the article.

Middle

This is the main content of the article. You’ve explained what users can expect from the article, and now you are giving it to them. Depending on the topic and objective, the middle of the article may be short or long. Ensure to leave clear indications to help the reader stay oriented as you move through the topic. Headings often help to do this.

Conclusion

The article needs to have a clean end to it. You need to summarize your topic, restate the takeaways, and maybe have a call to action depending on the objective of the article.

Other Resources

The government provides other good resources to help you in writing articles for general audiences. The articles published in the blog will generally follow the guidelines for other GC spaces as well.

Helpful Hints

Some items to keep in mind as you write:

  1. Is all the terminology explained?
    • Expand acronyms and abbreviations.
    • Define any terms that need it. This isn’t a journal article, so things like glossaries are not available. Terms need to be defined as they are used.
  2. Write as a peer of your readers.
    • Use language like “we can see that”, rather than “you will find that”.
  3. Think about visuals.
    • Readers will not like to have a long screen of text to read through.
    • Visuals can consist of graphics, charts, or anything that helps make your point.
  4. Try to avoid overly long sentences and paragraphs.
    • Readers will find it easier if content is broken into ingestible chunks.

Example Articles

Here are some examples of the types of writing produced in similar publications, and you can always check the existing articles.

Quick Overviews

Articles that are trying to give the reader a quick introduction to a topic are generally short and describe the topic at a high level to reach the largest audience possible.

Examples

Full Length Articles

Some topics warrant a long article to allow for a fuller explanation than an overview can facilitate. The article is still presented at a relatively high level, and is intended for a broad audience, but needs a lot of room to properly explain the topic.

Examples

Short Article with Long Follow-up

Some articles are initial introductions to a question or concept that is then followed up with an in depth exploration of the topic. These are presented as two distinct articles – a first one that presents a question or topic at a high level, and a second that explores or explains the topic in depth.

Examples