My biggest struggle isn't grammar or structure — it's motivation. I sit down to write and suddenly everything else seems more interesting. The "Scientist's Guide to Writing" claims to "encourage habits that improve motivation and productivity" and includes "a wealth of exercises" along with "numerous new literature citations to support the discussions in the book" .
The author, Stephen Heard, is a "professor of biology at the University of New Brunswick in Canada" and has written other books like "Charles Darwin's Barnacle and David Bowie's Spider" . So he's an actual scientist, not just a writing coach.
Some of the topics covered:
For other grad students: what strategies actually work for maintaining momentum? I need practical tips, not just "write every day."
The author, Stephen Heard, is a "professor of biology at the University of New Brunswick in Canada" and has written other books like "Charles Darwin's Barnacle and David Bowie's Spider" . So he's an actual scientist, not just a writing coach.
Some of the topics covered:
- "maintaining writing momentum"
- "structuring a scientific paper"
- "revising a first draft"
- "effective reading"
- "handling citations"
- "responding to peer reviews"
- "choosing the right journal for your research"
For other grad students: what strategies actually work for maintaining momentum? I need practical tips, not just "write every day."