If you are a freelance writer, keep Science News in mind. We're open to pitches. Are you a freelance journalist with a hot scoop or juicy scandal, a compelling profile of a scientist, or an original take on a science policy issue? If so, bring it to the award-winning News department of Science, the flagship research journal from the world’s largest general science society. We’re eager to break news and tell stories that no other science journalist has found. Here are some things you should know before pitching a story to us. The editors and writers of the News department are professional journalists and produce much of our news content. But we have plenty of appetite for freelance contributions—everything from 140-word news briefs to 2500-word features to investigative projects. About half of our online-only stories and a quarter of the stories in the weekly print issue are either assigned to freelancers we like working with or are pitched by freelancers. Because we receive all the big press releases and embargoed information from major journals (Science, Nature, PNAS, etc.), you will have very little luck successfully pitching a study from these. Our biggest piece of advice for selling us on a straight research story is this: Pitch us hidden gems. Note that we don’t take stories from academic researchers, company representatives, or public information officers wishing to promote their institutions. Freelance writers should also disclose any potential conflicts of interest when they pitch a story, whether it be a personal relationship with the subject or key source of a story or previous work for the institution that would be written about. If you currently pen press releases for a university, we won’t let you write about them, but if you did a feature for a school magazine a year ago and nothing since, we likely will. Just be transparent with us.
Science covers news in all areas of science, from geology to genetics, as well as science policy and issues important to the scientific community, such as science, technology, engineering, and math education and sexual harassment. We make it a priority to include women and people of color as quoted sources in our work to capture a range of perspectives. In print we publish news briefs, longer news analysis and trends stories, and features. Online, where we publish multiple daily stories, we focus on breaking news, though we are also interested in enterprise stories—that is, stories not tied to press releases, such as explainers on trending news and Q&As with interesting researchers. For most stories pay is per word, with rate depending on experience. Our rates begin at $0.75 per word for online-only stories and $1.25 per word for print-only stories. For certain types of stories, we pay a flat rate negotiated in advance—a typical online Q&A, for example, is $500. We cover travel expenses if agreed upon in advance and pay for reporting by the hour under certain circumstances.
HOW TO PITCH
- If you come across news, don’t wait to pitch it. We want to publish as soon as possible after the event. For embargoed studies, please pitch us at least 3 days in advance, so that we can OK the proposal and you can deliver a story a day or two before the embargo lifts.
- If you are pitching a news story about a research study, write a few sentences about what the study is about and why it’s a big deal. Include the press release and paper when possible.
- If you’re pitching a longer story, such as a feature, make sure your pitch also gives a sense of how you will tell it. What is its scope, will it focus on certain characters or places, what is the storyline? But keep the pitch tight, three or four paragraphs at most.
- If you’re new to us, please send us published clips—no more than three or four—so we can judge your writing.
- If you are not pitching embargoed news, please check Google News to see whether any other outlets have covered the story.
- Note any video and audio possibilities in your pitch.
- Put “Pitch” in your subject line. Otherwise your email may be flagged as spam or ignored as a press release.
Please, please, spend some time reading Science’s news site before pitching us. You’ll see that our stories, even those about medicine or business, all have some connection to basic research. You’ll also see that although we write for people with a keen interest in science, we are not aimed at the specialists. Our goal is to entice scientists and science enthusiasts to read broadly, and even for fun. The more original and interesting a proposal is, the more likely we are to take it. If you’re pitching a news story based on embargoed research, contact our Online News Editor David Grimm. Most other breaking news, ranging from policy news to issues important to the scientific community, will be handled as so-called ScienceInsiders and should be pitched to insider@aaas.org. If you think your story has potential as a longer piece for the magazine, send it to science_news@aaas.org and it will be matched up with the appropriate editor. You can also direct a pitch to a specific editor: Elizabeth Culotta (anthropology/archaeology/paleontology), Shraddha Chakradhar (diversity in science, health inequities and biomedicine), Martin Enserink (International news), Lila Guterman and John Travis (biology and biomedical news), Eric Hand (physical science news), and David Malakoff (science policy, energy, and environment).
- Submissions: dgrimm@aaas.org; insider@aaas.org; (for more particular topics, refer to editors' emails in the guidelines above.)
- Website: https://www.sciencenews.org/