Young Statisticians Writing Competition (Win Attendance to the Royal Statistical Society International Conference)

Young Statisticians Writing Competition (Win Attendance to the Royal Statistical Society International Conference)
BENEFITS
Three finalists will be invited to present their work at a special session of the Royal Statistical Society International Conference and that is where the overall winner will be announced. The winning article will be published in the October edition of Significance and online at significancemagazine.com. Runners-up will also be published online, at the editor’s discretion.
CRITERIA
Competition rules:
Entrants must be students, or within the first 10 years of their statistics careers.
Articles should be between 1,500 and 2,500 words long, and can include tables, figures, images and photographs.
Writing style must be clear and easy to read.
Avoid the formal layout of an academic report – the article should read like a magazine feature.
Technical terms and mathematics should be used sparingly, and suitably explained.
End references are optional, but should be limited to four.
Only submissions in English will be considered.
Manuscripts must be original and not under consideration for publication elsewhere, though we welcome magazine articles based on work in theses or in papers that have been submitted to or accepted by academic journals, provided the two are sufficiently different.
All articles will be assessed by a review committee. The judges will be made up of representatives from both the Young Statisticians Section and Significance.
Three finalists will win a one-day registration to the Royal Statistical Society Conference 2016 in Manchester, UK – but please note that travel and accommodation costs will not be covered.
The winning article will be published in Significance magazine, and online at significancemagazine.com.
Runner-up articles will be published on the Significance website, or in Significance magazine, at the editor’s discretion.
HOW TO APPLY
Can you tell a complex statistical story in an entertaining and thought-provoking way? Then apply. The rules of entry are simple. Send us your best article, of between 1,500 and 2,500 words, on the subject of your choosing. The article could be on work that you have done, or it could explain the work of others.
Please email your submissions in a text/Word file or as a PDF, to [email protected]. Make sure to include our competition entry form.
DEADLINE
The application closing date is 28 May 2018
PLEASE NOTE:
Note that travel and accommodation costs will not be covered.
Each year, Significance and the Young Statisticians Section of the Royal Statistical Society (RSS) host a competition to promote and encourage top-class writing about statistics. However, this year 2017, the competition forms part of the RSS Statistical Excellence Awards programme, and the prize has been renamed “The Statistical Excellence Award for Early Career Writing”.
The Royal Statistical Society (RSS) is a learned society for statistics, a professional body for statisticians, and a charity which promotes statistics for the public good. The society was founded in 1834 as the Statistical Society of London (LSS), though a perhaps unrelated London Statistical Society was in existence at least as early as 1824. The associations were formed with the object of gathering information about society. It was many decades before mathematics was regarded as part of the statistical project.
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