Die Inhalte dieser Seite sind leider nicht auf Deutsch verfügbar.

Sketchnoting in Science

Sketchnotes

… are visual notes that combine drawings and text. They can be used to quickly record content and visualise it in a way that it is easy to understand and more memorable.

… focus on the essentials. Drawings are therefore reduced and lack many details. Simple objects and symbols as well as different text characters are typical for the sketchnote style.

… can be used, for example, to illustrate the outcome of meetings, to visualise the main objectives of a research project or to make scientific content understandable for non-experts (in films, blogs, presentations, etc.).

Sketchnotes 2023

The sketchnotes below were drawn by participants of the course Sketchnoting in Science in January 2023.

The copyright of the images belongs to their individual creators.

Sketchnote "The Seagrass Holobiont"
Johanna Berlinghoff
Sketchnote "Benthic Foraminifera living in the deep"
Sofia Barragán Montilla
Sketchnote "Conservation vs. use in marine protected areas"
Wiebke Homes
Sketchnote of Lisa Indriana
Lisa Indriana
Sketchnote "MSM 116"
Heather Johnstone
Sketchnote "My road to success"
Bhakti Shah
Sketchnote "Cold-water coral mounds are the coolest"
Luis Greiffenhagen
Sketchnote "Dino Park"
Surya Eldo Virma Roza

Sketchnotes 2020

The sketchnotes below were drawn by participants of the course Sketchnoting in Science in October 2020.

The copyright of the images belongs to their individual creators.

Jaagni Parnami
Jaagni Parnami
Michaela Meier
Michaela Meier
Julia Gensel
Julia Gensel
Christina Klose
Christina Klose
Patrick Boyden
Patrick Boyden
Aarthi Balamurugan
Aarthi Balamurugan
Arne Leider
Arne Leider
Franziska Tell
Franziska Tell
Eva Bischof
Eva Bischof
Mareike Neumann
Mareike Neumann
Paula Senff
Paula Senff
Linn Sanguineti
Linn Sanguineti
Débora Raposo
Débora Raposo
Elinor Tessin
Elinor Tessin
Karla Rubio Sandoval
Karla Rubio Sandoval
Lara Stuthmann
Lara Stuthmann
Jana Nitsch
Jana Nitsch
Solveig Bühring
Solveig Bühring
Sabrin Abdelghany
Sabrin Abdelghany
 

Sketchnotes 2019

The sketchnotes below were drawn by participants of the course Sketchnotes for Scientists in February 2019.

The copyright of the images belongs to their individual creators.

Gökce Tuba Masur
'Optimal Balance Procedure' by Gökce Tuba Masur
Dmitrii Murashkin
'Sea Icea Leads on Microwave Images' by Dmitrii Murashkin
See also https://doi.org/10.1017/aog.2018.6
Mariem Saavedra
'Adaption of coccolithophores to environmental change in the Southern Ocean' by Mariem Saavedra
Mariem Saavedra
'My CV' by Mariem Saavedra
Mariem Saavedra
'Paleoceanographic Evolution of the Japan Sea over the last 460 kyr: A Coccolithophore Perspective' by Mariem Saavedra
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.marmicro.2019.01.001
Melanie Sattler
'PANGAEA - Data Publisher for Earth & Environmental Science' by Melanie Sattler
Petter Kiss
'The effect of population dynamics, growth and calcification of foraminifera on the carbonate flux' by Peter Kiss
Philipp Haberkorn
'Direct-shear-test optimization' by Philipp Haberkorn
Sabrina Hohmann
'Microfossils Go! Climate' by Sabrina Hohmann
Patrizia Geprägs
'MSP offshore preparations' by Patrizia Geprägs
Mariem Saavedra
Research keywords by Mariem Saavedra
Lina Madaj
'How can Isotopes Trace Sediment Provenance?' by Lina Madaj
Ludwig Valentin
'Becoming a PhD student' by Ludwig Valentin
Hadar Elyashiv
'Submarine landslides' by Hadar Elyashiv
Carolin Müller
'How much fish' by Carolin Müller
(see below for details)
 
Carolin Müller
'How much fish' by Carolin Müller
zoom I
Carolin Müller
'How much fish' by Carolin Müller
zoom II
Carolin Müller
'How much fish' by Carolin Müller
zoom III
Carolin Müller
'How much fish' by Carolin Müller
zoom IV