The Globe and Mail's
veteran science reporter-a tall, burly,
balding man with green_grey eyes and greying hair that stands
straight off his headÛwas at the
bottom of Inco's Creighton Mine near Sudbury, Ontario. His mind
was filled with the day's experiences: the four_minute,
ear_popping elevator ride straight down (a distance equivalent to
five stacked CN Towers), followed by a 15_minute walk through a
dusty, grimy, 41_C mine shaft before arriving at the Sudbury
Neutrino Observatory (SNO) site, where Strauss washed and changed
into a clean outfit and hat before entering the scrupulously
clean observatory.
Strauss was there to chronicle the
near_completion of a $70 million scientific instrument designed
to detect and determine the mass of subatomic particles called
neutrinos. When SNO begins to produce data in early 1999,
scientists may finally learn whether neutrinos make up a portion
of the universe's "dark matter"Ûthe
undetectable matter which accounts for roughly 90 percent of the
universe. In tracking the story, Strauss had accumulated a
massive amount of information about the project, most of it
articles and faxes filed in a battered and overflowing folder in
his cluttered cubicle at the Globe. And now,
and seven interviews at his disposal, Strauss was ready to write
his article about the plan to count "atomic ghosts."
The result was a finely crafted, 37_inch feature. It's classic
Strauss: intimidating passages about fusion taking place within a
stellar core are tempered by descriptions of "teeny_tiny"
neutrinos. Through creative, clear and compelling writing,
Strauss was able to add context and give his readers an accurate
sense of the significance of the research being
done-the hallmark of great scientific
journalism.
But work like his is a rarity. While
Strauss and a small group of other dedicated science journalists
in Canada produce articles rich with detail, context and style,
there simply aren't enough of them working at Canadian daily
newspapers: according to Matthew's Media Directories, only 37
science writers and editors work at Canada's 108 dailies,
amounting to only three per cent of all editorial staff. At a
time when science plays a crucial role in many stories from the
decline in fish stocks on the Pacific and Atlantic coasts to the
effects of ozone depletion over the Arctic, from the use of
genetically engineered crops in the Prairies to the climatic
upheaval affecting all of Canada the coverage of science in most
Canadian dailies remains inadequate.
It's also
error_prone; while research on error rates is hard to come by,
those working in and studying science journalism doubt that much
has changed since a 1974 study in Journalism
Quarterly reported that only 8.8% of science articles
were found to be error_free, compared to a 40.1% to 59.5%
error_free rate in general news stories. These errors included
the omission of relevant material, quotations being used out of
context, and no linkage or continuity shown to previous work.
That's bad news in more than just the most obvious sense, since
more than half of all Canadians get their science information
from newspapers. So why aren't Canada's dailies doing a better
job at covering science?
Think back to the
last time a political story made the front page of the daily
newspaper you read. It's not much of a stretch, right? Or
something about business? Okay, now, what about the last time you
read a front_page story about
science-excluding medicine, since it
constitutes its own category of journalism. Can you come up with
five?
Sure, Dolly leaps to mind, and the Mars
Pathfinder mission, and there's a good chance that you've read
about El NiÒo, but if you stalled out there, you're
not alone. It's hard to find science anywhere in a Canadian
daily, much less on the front page. And when you do find it, more
likely than not it's a two_inch blurb pulled off the wire,
headlined "breakthrough." "If you did a study of North American
science coverage headlines, that's probably the single word you
would find most often in headlines on science stories, because
that always galvanizes somebody's attention," says Chris Dornan,
the director of Carleton University's School of Journalism and
Mass Communication. A restless, almost frenetic man with nearly
black hair and an easy grin, Dornan did his doctoral thesis on
the academic view of science in the media. "But if that's all you
get, you get a skewed portrait of science. You get a portrait of
science as inexorably progressing, just cracking problems one by
one."
"Science presents journalism with a problem,
because journalism would like science to be about discovery. But
it's also about process," says the Globe's
Strauss. "It's hard to fit into the temporal mentality of
newspapers." So what happens is this: if an assignment editor
picks up a science story on the wire, the task of writing the
story usually falls to a staff reporter. In a few hours, this
staff writer (who probably has spent the last couple of years
covering a mix of local beats) is suddenly faced with a field
that is completely foreign to him. He reads the wire copy, calls
the University of Toronto for a quote from someone,
anyone, and distils it all into a few inches of copy.
All too often, it's "gee_whiz" coverage, which fails to include
adequate explanations, oversimplifies complex concepts, and
completely bypasses discussions of the implications or importance
of that discovery. While the writer may have the best of
intentions, the result is often as thin as the paper it's printed
on.
What a science writer can provide is the experience
to handle science stories with depth. This doesn't mean a boring
story: in fact, science writers are arguably some of the most
skilled writers at papers, because they have
to turn complex material into a story that is interesting,
accurate and accessible to readers. Shelley Page was the science
writer for The Ottawa Citizen from 1990 until
1995. Known for her exhaustively researched profiles that
revealed the human side of scientists, Page has won the respect
of her colleagues, as well as a 1993 Science in Society
Journalism Award for her profile of Alan Hildebrand, the Canadian
geologist who discovered a 65_million_year_old impact crater
beneath Mexico's Yucatan Peninsula, made by a meteorite that may
have wiped out the dinosaurs. Despite the pressure of a daily's
deadlines, Page was determined to document the process of
discovery, and after reading through his scientific articles, she
spent hours interviewing the reticent Hildebrand. "I can't think
of better training to be a good journalist than being a science
reporter, because that's the one beat area where you can't go in
and fly by the seat of your pants," says Page, pointing to the
hours she spent poring over dense, jargon_heavy scientific papers
while researching science stories. "You'll blow the interview,
and you won't be able to write a story that anyone will ever
understand."
That total immersion is common among
science writers. The Globe Îs
Stephen Strauss keeps his edge by reading journals, other
newspapers and seeking out up_to_date information on the web. He
doesn't have a science education-he studied
history, political science and law-but like
most good science reporters, his desk is cluttered with
textbooks, scientific journals and popular science magazines. And
he tackles science news gathering using techniques that might
make reporters on other beats
cringeÛlike double_checking quotes
with a source. "Science is different," says Strauss, "because if
someone has misstated something about their research or someone
else's research, you're not interested in the misstatement. You
want the second thought. It's better, it's more accurate. So you
end up with a different modus operandi."
But even at
the newspaper with the best science coverage in the country, at
least one editor believes science still gets short shrift. "We
don't have an applied technology reporter," says Jerry Johnson,
editor of the Globe's now_defunct Middle
Kingdom section. "We don't have a news reporter dedicated to
computers." While there are positions such as "small business
reporter" and "municipal affairs specialist," science reporters
typically cover all
scienceÛfrom astrophysics to
zoology-and that's if there's a science
reporter at all.
Why the shortage of science reporters?
Carleton University's Dornan says that for most dailies, it's a
question of money. He presents the Montreal
Gazette-which doesn't have even a single
science reporterÛas an example. "The
Montreal Gazette is the only English_language
daily in Montreal," says Dornan. "So, it's basically at
saturation readership, they've blanketed their available market".
And the costs of a science reporter's salary, benefits, expenses,
travel and resources are too great to justify a beat that would
not generate revenue. "It wouldn't get them anymore readers.
Would it bring them any more advertising? No, because there is no
natural advertising constituency for science. It's not like the
manufacturers of gas chromatography equipment are going to
suddenly start advertising in the Montreal
Gazette." (It's interesting to note, though,
that The New York Times, which publishes the
grand old dame of science sections, successfully sells pages of
computer and technology advertising around it.)
The
Gazette relies instead on wire services for
big science stories, and assigns a reporter only if there is a
local angle. For example, a research project at McGill will be
covered by their universities reporter. "I think it's better to
have a dedicated science reporter, but we do what we can," says
Eva Friede, editor of the Gazette's weekly
science page. "As editors, we always wish we had more reporters,
more specialized reporters. It's a fact of life that there isn't
always the staff to do what we want done...but we try to cover
what's happening in the city, either with a reporter who's beat
includes that field or just anybody who's available."
"If science was sort of local, in that regard, if people cared
about their science in Montreal, then you
might get more robust science coverage, but science is not that
type of enterprise," says Dornan. "As well, if science were more
political in nature, then you might get more robust science
coverage, but scientists don t see their work as political in
that regard-they see it as precisely
apolitical." Political reporting has prominence because of
historical precedent, but also because it's about
powerÛpower that affects people's
lives in a very direct way. "Science actually does impact on
people's lives in many profound ways, but it's not quite so
visible," says Dornan. "So all of that tends to conspire to make
science less prominent in the news agenda."
The
inevitable result is a lower level of scientific literacy among
newspaper readers. And while "Which came first science illiteracy
or lousy science reporting?" has a "chicken or egg" ring to it,
newspaper publishers have to take some responsibility for the
problem. A national science literacy survey done in 1995 for The
Discovery Channel reported that for 55 percent of Canadians,
newspapers were the primary source of scientific information. The
same survey reported that 58 percent of Canadians stillbelieve that humans and dinosaurs lived at the same
time. (Despite what you see on The
Flintstones, Homo sapiens never
walked the earth with dinosaurs, let alone used them as lawn
mowers.) "Science journalists have done themselves and the
Canadian public no great favours by always assuming,
ÎWell, I can't go back and explain some of this,'" says
Peter Calamai, an Ottawa_based writer, editor and visiting
associate professor at Carleton University. With a heavy
emphasis, he adds, "Yes, you can."
Calamai, who has
spent more than 30 years writing for Canadian papers, is
convinced that science literacy must be improved amongst both
readers and reporters. "We're graduating people from schools who
are basically ignorant. They know less than a well_educated
person in the Victorian times did about
science-and most of what they know is wrong."
It's not because they don't think science is important: one study
found that more than 80 percent of Canadians over 15 thought
being informed about science was important. But clearly it's not
all that important at many journalism schools: Calamai points to
a 1992 Impact Group study of the number of courses offered at
Canadian journalism schools. Law and politics top the list. At
the very bottom are science, environment and technology. And so
we end up with scientifically_illiterate general reporters
writing for a scientifically_illiterate
audience-all at a time when science is getting
more complex, and its impact has spread to all aspects of our
lives.
On December 17, 1997, dailies across
Canada ran short wire stories about a popular Japanese cartoon
featuring bright flashing explosions that had triggered seizures
in hundreds of young children. "Cartoon yanked after it gives
kids seizures" read the Associated Press wire story when it
appeared in the Halifax Chronicle-Herald. The
Montreal Gazette, the Ottawa
Citizen and the Toronto Star ran
virtually identical versions of the AP story, while the
Globe ran a tiny Reuters story near the back
of the front section.
Around 1 p.m. on the 18th,
Stephen Strauss was asked to add some context about epilepsy. He
called a contact at an epilepsy society in Montreal, who referred
him to an expert in Vancouver. Thirty web sites and a medical
textbook on photosensitive epilepsy later, Strauss approached the
foreign desk to suggest melding his information with the latest
wire copy from Tokyo. By 6 p.m., Strauss's 14 inches of copy was
combined with an equivalent amount from an Associated Press
writer in Japan.
Along with explaining what can cause
photosensitive seizures, Strauss suggested how television or
video_induced seizures might be prevented. "Instead
of...explosions with a regular 'bang-bang-bang' visual beat to
them, they should pulse to a pattern that feels something like
Îbang-bang, bang, bang-bang-bang'," he wrote,
practically inviting his readers to tap it out with their
fingertips. By translating the multi syllabic, intimidating
language of science into something interesting and
understandable, a dedicated science reporter brought the hidden
science story to light. Too bad that kind of writing is still as
elusive as a neutrino in a nickel mine.