Up-Goer Five Challenge: Making Big Ideas Simpler by Talking About Them in Words We Use a Lot
Inspired by the XKCD comic that describes the Saturn V Rocket using only the thousand most common words in English (http://xkcd.com/1133/), we ask speakers to present short (~5-minute) scientific talks using the same vocabulary (determined via the Up-Goer Five Text Editor: http://splasho.com/upgoer5). The talk is preferably about your own research but can also be about a general topic you are interested in.
Why? (Written using the Up-Goer Five Text Editor.)
When you change the kinds of words you use to explain what you do, you:
- Find what is at the heart of your work.
- Can now tell ANYONE what you study, because you can make things as simple as they can be.
- Show that it matters to explain what you do so others can understand, even if it's hard.
For motivation, check out the Up-Goer Five talks from AGU Fall Meeting 2020: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lxWrerZhfrk. Join us for an inspiring session and learn about your and others' research in new and beautifully simple ways!