[Behind the Scenes] The making of my posts

in #science6 years ago (edited)

Sometimes it's better to show rather than tell. For a while I have been reading posts and speaking to users about their crappy posts and the problem is thematically the same in every case; people seem to be writing for the sake of writing. Or money. Passion on a subject is often absent but also knowledge of how to write one is often limited to 'reading Wikipedia'.

For this reason, here is an open blog about how I personally construct a post for SteemSTEM. It might be insightful to n00bs and even 0ldz. This will be about a so-far-unwritten post for my series on the Tree of Life. Later, or tomorrow, I will have used all the material to create the final product from whatever I find during the making of this post.

Feel free to try and beat me to my own blog =P

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Finding what to write about

Everyone is on even territory when it comes to creativity of posts and a sustainable 'business model' as a blogger. For me the best solution has been making series. This not only gives a flow of direction I can continue indefinitely, but it also allows me to break clickbait-style topics apart and engineer them into far more valuable and learned posts. More on that later.

Now, I consider myself well-informed in evolutionary biology, but even if I was an expert - which I'm absolutely not - there are no single experts that cover such a vast swath of evolutionary time and processes. This is totally fine. Writing about things I'm legitimately interested or even passionate about is the way to go. In the past I have written about anything from the bugs I find in the bamboo garden below my apartment to crazy celestial objects and obscure island locations. Limiting myself to what I happen to be an expert at would be just that; limiting. So I like to expand to whatever my eyes land on that day.

Once I found my primary topic - for this example, the 'Tree of Life' series - I needed to think of the direction - Writing a timeline from animal to animal, historical events, genetic variation? there are many ways to approach the subject. In the case of this series, I use an interactive tree for reference. and follow the tree down the line from the beginning of life to modern humans, making a new post whenever a significant branch breaks off. If I wanted to do this forever, I could always change topic and split off earlier to reach any other modern animal in the same way.

Finding the knowledge

To start off, I might use Wikipedia as a reference of terminology, or I might use personal experience in the case of the Chinese Pseudoscience series, it all depends. Google is also my friend here, but my best friend so far has been Google Scholar. There are plenty of other sources to access academic content but for the most part, Google and Scholar suffice for the Tree of Life series. Others, like my 'New Discoveries' series required me to dig much deeper, even personally emailing authors for more information on their current projects.

So last week I was looking at eggs and how they changed to adapt to land-based hatching rather than depending on water to survive. Where do I go from here? Well, I use the interactive map and get zooming. We were last looking at Amniotes:

The next part here is of course mammals but I notice here that the monotremes - Egg-laying mammals - break off here. This makes total sense and I might want to write about this moment before moving on to Therian Mammals. A quick google takes me to the wiki page Theria, which I will quickly brief over. I'll try to find a point of interest here or on Google, and if nothing comes through, move on to a later part of the branch.

In this case, I found a few things:

  • Key proteins called syncytins
  • Endogenization
  • The coracoid bone
  • 'Juramaia'

These are where I can start digging further. Another Google takes me naturally to more academic sources, but Google Scholar can come into play here, too. As an example search, I came across this, this, this and this.

Some of these might be stuck behind a paywall, others might only offer the abstract and many will be totally open access. It depends. I should note that I make use of the timeline feature on scholar.google because it's always useful and interesting to find the most recent research on a given topic and any controversy and disagreements that come with it:

Using the knowledge

At this point I simply have to get reading. It would be absurd to read the entirety of every paper and search result I come across, so for most research papers I generally read the abstract and then skip down to the Discussion section. This is so I both know what I will be reading about, obviously, but also to find out any flaws in their methodology.

In the case of the third example above, it's a Chinese authored paper which for me raises a big red flag, so it's important to read their personal insights of limitations but also to read more carefully into the whole paper to see if anything fishy sticks out.

Once all this is done, I'll read in depth the sources I decided were fully useful to me, or I'll google for some more. I might even google some clickbait journalism on a discovery on the topic. Anything of any quality is a good place for a jump start. Looking at this topic, I might read more into the placenta; a seriously complex system that, in my head, seemed to evolve from nowhere. This is a gap in my knowledge I want to fill up.

A quick search with terms like 'earliest placenta' got me this, this, this and this

I should have a pretty good picture of where I'm actually going to go with the article at this point, whether it's the the development of the placenta, the separation of marsupials, both or neither. Whichever way I decide, once a theme is established, I can then dig even further and repeat the above process with Google and Scholar if necessary.

On the chance that this isn't enough for a full post (unlikely), I'll just move through the tree, or in the general sense, move to what might have been the next episode and join it into one. No harm in that.

Images

Usually images are just a tool to break up the text into easier chunks, but sometimes they need specific images from particular researchers. This is where I am forced to either email them and wait a day or so for a response (Always yes so far), or do a crude drawing of my own (Rarely had to do that, thankfully). As long as people get the point, it doesn't have to be some superb rendition from some famous artist called Giovanni in the mountains of Tuscany.

Wrapping up

It's likely that I've made a total mess of the structure of the post by this point. It took me the longest time to realise I can actually go back and edit whatever I've written, even delete entire paragraphs if I've gone off on some pointless rambling tirade. I'll typically aim to wrap it up at about 1,000 words, but this isn't a hard rule, sometimes it's 800, other times 1,400. It depends.

This is also the point where I might already give myself a good idea for where I should go in the next week's post, having researched already up to this point. Sometimes I'll drop a note at the end as a cliffhanger, but really it's so I can go back to that post and remind myself of what I was gonna do.

How long does it all take?

I'm not really sure to be honest... There was a time where it would take a solid 12 hours or a couple of days to make a post far worse than what I produce nowadays. I tend to juggle the post between other parts of my day and I don't typically start at a consistent time - though usually at night. I suppose a post that takes around 3 hours is likely going to be a pretty decent post for me. I don't rush or pressure myself to get it done, I think that's the most important thing.

I have to think in terms of sustainability. I love doing this and so I don't want to make myself bored or stressed about something I love. I learnt this from Roger Federer, now a 36 year old tennis player yet again ranked no.1 or 2 in the world, depending on when you look. He learnt to sustain his passion for decades.

Hope this helps

I am not @gandalf, and thus my abilities as a writer are not on par with wizardry, so perhaps others in steemSTEM would like to write a post on their processes. Programming, maths, physics, geology, history, people who write about their profession, students, I imagine all of these will have totally different ways of writing posts. It'll be good for users who are trapped in a cage of copying Wikipedia or WebMD to get some healthy ideas from pro SteemSTEMmers.

How about @egothiest, @gentleshaid and @suesa??

Sort:  

no porn in between? That's a recipe for disaster!

I tend to juggle the post between other parts of my day

I didn't say either way =P

I don't know about 3 hours to write a post...that seems light on (but then I procrastinate a lot - I'll end up with a couple of drafts!).

Some good tips in there though, I think keeping to your passion is definitely the way to go, even if you have to do a lot of research to fill in the gaps.

I am not a SteemSTEMmer but, I do have various techniques to find and create content. If you are interested, I can do an overview and give some tips from that angle.

I had read your post describing your writing model- Freewriting. You make most of your posts from your own experiences rather than researching for hours, Right? If you use some specific techniques please do share with us through one of your upcoming posts. :)

Yes, I freewrite a lot but, there is always a little more to it than that ;)

Sounds good, look forward to it! I'd say you're a SteemStem Speculator of a sort. A good position to be in

I am interested.

Lots of great advice here. This also links well with @procrastilearner's post from today on informal peer review and feedback within steemstem. Finding topics to write on becomes a lot easier when we can bounce our work off others in the community.

Yep I saw this! Only just got round to upvoting with steemstem though. We do need to see more collaboration, so thanks for that!

Hi @mobbs!

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Writing about things I'm legitimately interested or even passionate about is the way to go

This summarizes a whole lot of things. I always advise people; even my mentees; to always write something they're passionate about. By this, they'd discover the post is just flowing naturally within them, and they can feel and relate with the post.

Nice piece buddy. I'm gonna save this post for future references

That's the nail on the head there - it helps the content ooze out of you and even give a sense of pride. Nicely put =)

This is an awesome initiative and the challenge is openly accepted. I have a feeling it will go a long way in helping more people than we can imagine. I will see what I can do in the next few days. Thank you for thinking up and actually writing about this.

Great! Look forward to seeing how we differentiate =)

I kind of try to follow the same pastern as u do. And writing up a good article is not an easy task, i think. It takes me several days to complete a single steemSTEM article. Thanks for sharing ur techniques with us.
Cheers!

Don't spend too long on them, or you'll get burnt out and disappointed when you realise the rewards don't match the hours you've put into it!

Hello @mobbs

A good representation of most effective approach to writing articles that meets the standards of being published on renown journals.

...so for most research papers I generally read the abstract and then skip down to the Discussion section. This is so I both know what I will be reading about, obviously, but also to find out any flaws in their methodology.

I use the approach quoted above. On average, I use two days to consult sources. This time is not definite. Sometimes it could stretch to upto 3, 4 days. Other times, I might even be lost in my search for latest papers on a topic. Ain't easy, I must confess. However, there are some other strategies highlighted here that I found very useful and will surely incorporate them into my writing habit.

This is a masterpiece that will benefit both current writers and prospective STEM writers. And for this reason, I am going to RESTEEM it.

Thanks @mobbs for having the interests of others at heart.

Regards.

@eurogee of @euronation and @steemstem communities

Thanks for the resteem!

Sometimes it could stretch to upto 3, 4 days

Especially when you lose everything without saving! I think the more we do it, the more frequently, the quicker it gets overall. It often feels more like routine for me now rather than a struggle

Exactly. For me, it feels like a struggle. I believe with time, it will become a routine. Thanks.

Your method is a bit different from mine, but I like yours too. I usually write on a particular topic when I see something that triggers it. It takes sometimes within 6 hours to 3 days. Oh yeah, I may just be slow like that :)

Well my 3 hour quote is probably an underestimation, I just tried to erase all the bits in between where I watch a YouTube video here, have a shower there... and other exciting parts of my day

Oh yeah, it takes a while for a good post to be ready for posting.

Oh yeah, it takes a
While for a good post to be
Ready for posting.

                 - greenrun


I'm a bot. I detect haiku.

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