50 episodes

Grey (or gray) literature – 'grey lit' for short – includes such forms of communication as reports, white papers, dissertations, newsletters, slide decks, blogs, and podcasts. The Grey Lit Café explores the opportunities and benefits that grey lit provides for professionals and researchers. The podcast is directed by Anthony Haynes, produced by Dr Bart Hallmark, and published by Frontinus Ltd, a communications agency focused on engineering, infrastructure, sustainability, and research. Frontinus provides consultancy, editing, writing, and training services. If you're creating some grey literature and would like some support, contact us via our website, frontinus.org.uk.

The Grey Lit Caf‪é‬ Anthony Haynes

    • Science

Grey (or gray) literature – 'grey lit' for short – includes such forms of communication as reports, white papers, dissertations, newsletters, slide decks, blogs, and podcasts. The Grey Lit Café explores the opportunities and benefits that grey lit provides for professionals and researchers. The podcast is directed by Anthony Haynes, produced by Dr Bart Hallmark, and published by Frontinus Ltd, a communications agency focused on engineering, infrastructure, sustainability, and research. Frontinus provides consultancy, editing, writing, and training services. If you're creating some grey literature and would like some support, contact us via our website, frontinus.org.uk.

    Why we need to talk about silver literature

    Why we need to talk about silver literature

    Anthony Haynes writes: I've long fought for a greater appreciation of forms of serious communication, other than just books and journal papers - forms such as reports, white papers, presentations, and blogs.

    But it's difficult because the collective term for such forms is 'grey [or 'grey'] literature', which is a term likely to enthuse anyone.

    'Grey' too easily evokes dullness and drabness.

    So the term won't do. Instead, I propose 'silver literature' - a term that does more justice to the sense that such works are valuable. Silver literature constitutes a vault of huge value.

    Why, even those users of research who continue to assert that peer-reviewed journal papers represent a 'gold standard' of scientific communication must surely acknowledge that.

    Here, then, to mark our 50th episode is a proposal: speak not of grey lit, but of silver lit.

    #silverlit

    Further listening

    If you enjoyed listening to this episode, you might find the following of interest:
    The games we play in science and research communicationWelcome to The Grey Lit CaféAnother season over and what have we done?References

    Thomas Gray, 'Elegy written in a  country churchyard'


    Credits
    Sound production: Bart HallmarkMusic: from Handel's Water Music, courtesy of the United States Marine Band and Marine Chamber OrchestraSupport the showAbout the publisher

    This episode is published by Frontinus Ltd. We're a communications consultancy that helps organisations and individuals to communicate scientific, professional, and technical content to non-specialist audiences.

    We provide
    consultancy mentoring editing and writing training and work on presentations, bids and proposals, and publications (for example, reports and papers).

    To learn more about services or explore ways of working together, please contact us via our website, http://frontinus.org.uk/.

    • 6 min
    How to give a presentation on engineering

    How to give a presentation on engineering

    Many engineers need to give presentations. They do so in a variety of contexts - for example, as part of a pitch, project report, conference, or  job application. Wouldn't it be nice if there was a top-quality resource on how to do presentations, specifically about engineering?

    Well, there is! This episode introduces Rothwell & Cloud's Engineering speaking by design,

    Reference

    Edward J. Rothwell & Michael J. Cloud, Engineering Speaking by Design:
    Delivering Technical Presentations with Real Impact (Routledge)

    Further listening

    We hope you enjoyed listening to this episode. You might also enjoy:
    Review: Putting stories to work, by Shawn CallahanThe art of pitching, with Yuxia ZouWordclouds: a neglected form of grey literatureCredits
    Sound production: Bart HallmarkMusic: from Handel's Water Music, courtesy of the United States Marine Band and Marine Chamber OrchestraSupport the showAbout the publisher

    This episode is published by Frontinus Ltd. We're a communications consultancy that helps organisations and individuals to communicate scientific, professional, and technical content to non-specialist audiences.

    We provide
    consultancy mentoring editing and writing training and work on presentations, bids and proposals, and publications (for example, reports and papers).

    To learn more about services or explore ways of working together, please contact us via our website, http://frontinus.org.uk/.

    • 7 min
    Grey literature workflows: the surprising role of pen & paper

    Grey literature workflows: the surprising role of pen & paper

    Word processing has been around a long time now - so long, that we barely use the phrase anymore. So dominant in our workflows has it become that we act as though there's no need to distinguish it - as if there is simply no alternative.

    So pen and paper have become redundant forms of technology then?

    Well, no, actually. This episode dares, unfashionably, to explore how non-digital technology can contribute to the workflows used in the creation of pieces of professional and scientific communication.

    And before anyone shouts, "Technophobia!" - no, not a bit. The argument is simply that different forms of technology have different capacities and potentials - and that there are some processes where pen and paper can come into their own.

    In the process, we explore document design, types of paper, and the nature of composition,

    Reference and links

    Sven Birketts, The Gutenberg Elegies (Farrar, Strauss & Giroux, 2006)

    The pen shop in Oxford is Pens Plus.

    Further listening

    If you enjoyed this episode, you might enjoy the following episodes:
    Don't fall in love with your work: Sabuhi Essa on creative processesWasted words: our antidote to verbosityLearning to become design literate: a key resourceSupport the showAbout the publisher

    This episode is published by Frontinus Ltd. We're a communications consultancy that helps organisations and individuals to communicate scientific, professional, and technical content to non-specialist audiences.

    We provide
    consultancy mentoring editing and writing training and work on presentations, bids and proposals, and publications (for example, reports and papers).

    To learn more about services or explore ways of working together, please contact us via our website, http://frontinus.org.uk/.

    • 33 min
    'Quality blogs', with Giovanni Salucci: innovation in scientific and research communication

    'Quality blogs', with Giovanni Salucci: innovation in scientific and research communication

    You can wait a long time for ambitious innovations in the communication of science and research - and then two come along together.

    In our previous episode, Scholarly Podcasts, Mack Hagood articulated his thinking behind a novel approach to podcasting.

    Now we're delighted to publish our interview with Prof. Giovanni Salucci (University of Florence) and Dr Erika Paoletti on a novel approach to blogging.

    Blogging, of course, is no longer new to the field of scientific and scholarly communication. But in this interview Giovanni and Erika introduce a bold innovation - the notion of 'quality blogs' (QBs)

    They explain what QBs are, how they relate to both other forms of blogs and journal papers, and the crucial role of metadata.

    Though the interviews with Giovanni & Erika and Mack are designed to make sense independently, we suggest they're best thought of as a  diptych. Together, they indicate ways to enrich the communication of serious content.

    References and links

    The proposal for QBs is outlined in 'The Quality Blog: Proposal of a New Format in Lieu of Academic Research Blog' (Journal of Scholarly Publishing, Volume 54 Issue 4, October 2023, pp. pp. 524-551).

    Further listening

    If you enjoyed this episode, you might enjoy the following:
    Scholarly podcasts, with Mack HagoodInnovation in research dissemination, with Cora ColeOnline lecturing, with Bart HallmarkSupport the showAbout the publisher

    This episode is published by Frontinus Ltd. We're a communications consultancy that helps organisations and individuals to communicate scientific, professional, and technical content to non-specialist audiences.

    We provide
    consultancy mentoring editing and writing training and work on presentations, bids and proposals, and publications (for example, reports and papers).

    To learn more about services or explore ways of working together, please contact us via our website, http://frontinus.org.uk/.

    • 18 min
    Review: Putting stories to work, by Shawn Callahan

    Review: Putting stories to work, by Shawn Callahan

    Anthony Haynes writes: Many scientists and researchers have come to realise that communicating their work effectively requires them to tell a story.

    But how?

    One resource is brilliant at answering that question: Putting stories to work, by Shawn Callahan. This review introduces some of Callahan's key insights and recommendations.

    Reference

    Shawn Callahan, Putting stories to work (Pepperberg Press).
    Support the showAbout the publisher

    This episode is published by Frontinus Ltd. We're a communications consultancy that helps organisations and individuals to communicate scientific, professional, and technical content to non-specialist audiences.

    We provide
    consultancy mentoring editing and writing training and work on presentations, bids and proposals, and publications (for example, reports and papers).

    To learn more about services or explore ways of working together, please contact us via our website, http://frontinus.org.uk/.

    • 14 min
    Scholarly podcasts, with Mack Hagood

    Scholarly podcasts, with Mack Hagood

    Anthony Haynes writes: Nobody could accuse The Grey Lit Café of ignoring innovation in the communication of science and research! In fact, we're delighted to showcase innovative thinking, as in such episodes as 
     Innovation in research dissemination: Cora Cole on GreyLitOnline lecturing: Bart Hallmark on pitfalls and good practiceUnderstanding preprints with Jonny Coates- and shortly we'll be publishing an interview with Giovanni Salucci on his notion of 'the quality blog'.

    Here, in an episode fizzing with intellectual excitement, Mack Hagood develops some innovative thinking on podcasting.

    This episode

    Why should scholarship be done aloud? And how should 'sonic' scholarship be done?

    In pursuit of the answers to these questions, Mack Hagood (Associate Professor of Media and Communication at Miami University, Ohio) distinguishes between three types of podcast: 
    'hi-fi, mid-register'; 'lo-fi, high-register'the 'third way'  podcast - the form that Mack proposes as an alternative form to journal papers. In the process, Mack delves into the characteristics and the benefits of this new form.
    References and links

    Mack Hagood, 'The scholarly podcast: form and function in audio academia' in Jeremy Wade-Morris & Eric Hoyt, Saving new sounds: podcast preservation and historiography (University of Michigan, 2021).

    Mack Hagood's sites include:
    MactrasoundPhantom Power The researcher mentioned at Cambridge Judge Business School is Pearl Phaovisaid.

    The book on narrative is Shawn Callahan, Putting stories to work (Pepperberg Press, 2016).

    Further listening

    If you enjoyed listening to this episode, you might also enjoy:
    Writing reports successfullySponsored reportCredits
    Sound production: Bart HallmarkMusic: from Handel's WaterSupport the showAbout the publisher

    This episode is published by Frontinus Ltd. We're a communications consultancy that helps organisations and individuals to communicate scientific, professional, and technical content to non-specialist audiences.

    We provide
    consultancy mentoring editing and writing training and work on presentations, bids and proposals, and publications (for example, reports and papers).

    To learn more about services or explore ways of working together, please contact us via our website, http://frontinus.org.uk/.

    • 26 min

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