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Published byRandell Jenkins Modified over 9 years ago
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From Pipedreams to Pipelines Scholarly Publishing and the Art of Having Fun
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Topics for Conversation Why publish? What to publish? Where to publish? How to publish? Technical aspects Psychological aspects
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Why Me? Editorships Review of Educational Research Journal of Experimental Education Florida Journal of Educational Research External reviewer Educational Researcher American Educational Research Journal Psychological Methods Educational and Psychological Measurement Published in a variety of journals for 20+ years
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Five Not-So-Easy Pieces Have something worth saying Say it well Find the right place to say it Persevere Enjoy
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Why Publish? Mandated Professional responsibilities Educational preparation Choice Prestige Perks Pleasure
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What’s Worth Saying? Problem/Questions Trivial vs. Substantive New twists and insights Know the literature Research of the finest kind Every compromise a weak link Why waste your time on junk? How much more effort? Good problems + good methods = success
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What’s Out There? Empirical studies Reviews & syntheses of others’ work Descriptions of “my stuff” Advocacy Criticism & re-interpretation Book reviews Theoretical papers
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Things Well Said Read, read, read Write early, write often Know your audience Good writing is good teaching The intelligent but naïve reader Target a journal and follow a model Seek advice from the published Mentors, co-authors and friendly critics The promise and the peril of the “next draft” The good-enough principle
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Things Well Said (Cont’d) Series of steps First draft Internal proof and revise Second draft Friendly critics Proof and revise Third draft Conference presentation (Hopefully) friendly critics Proof and revise Fourth draft Editors
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Anatomy of a Scholarly Paper First: Accuracy and clarity Second: Style and interest
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Choosing an Outlet Know the field Major journals Major authors (where do they publish?) Sources you’ve cited The web is not enough Target the best journal with the best fit Appropriate content first Academic reputation second Model your paper Follow recently published examples Instructions for authors
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What Makes a ‘Good’ Journal? Readership and circulation Practitioners Researchers/scholars General public Impact factors Total citations by others Long-term citations by others Selectivity Acceptance rates/rejection rates Not a very meaningful criterion, but some folks are impressed with these statistics
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Editorial Process: The Editor Submission to editor/editors Pre-submission query? Cover letter Paper/electronic: follow the rules! Be patient but not too patient Reject/Revise/Send out for review Appropriate content Appropriate quality
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Editorial Process: The Reviewers Anonymity of author(s) and reviewer(s) Reviewer expertise? Decision letter from editor Accept without revision (extremely rare!) Accept with minor revision (rare!) Revise and resubmit (common) Reject (common) Be patient but not too patient!
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Editorial Process: Resubmission Which revisions to make? Mandatory revisions Suggestions Explicitly address all criticisms Same reviewers or different reviewers Cover letter to editor/editors Detail changes (page numbers) Defend your work Be gracious
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Editorial Process: Rejection Consider reviews carefully Fatal flaw in your work? Misunderstanding by reviewers? Poor fit with journal? Does ‘no’ really mean ‘no’? Major revision and submit as new manuscript? Don’t criticize the critics Conversation with editor
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Editorial Process: Acceptance! Congratulate yourself and your co- authors Keep copy of acceptance letter or email Immediate publication credit Manuscripts get lost (changes in editorships) Page proofs Check for typos No major changes – only corrections Quick turn-around Purchase reprints?
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The Psychology of Scholarship Habits Publishing is an important part of our profession (teaching, research, service) Finite time and energy to see a manuscript through the publication process (be selective) Reading, writing, keeping up with the field Feeding your soul Colleagues and co-authors
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The Psychology of Scholarship Willing to take risks “Rejection” is a harsh word, but a helpful one An error in conversation is limited in time and breadth An error in publication lasts forever and can be seen by anyone Every rejection holds a lesson for us Thick skin Critics are your friends Don’t take things personally John Tukey and Jacob Cohen: publication challenges in their careers
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Professional Perseverance Patience and the lengthy pipeline Avoid the temptation to double dip Same reviewer pool for multiple journals “Least publishable unit” Multiple papers from single project Self-plagiarism Multiple, staggered projects Pleasures of “Revise and Resubmit” Pleasures of “Reject” Tough skins and the love of flowers Plethora of potential publishers
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The Art of Having Fun Joining a grand conversation Leaving your mark on the world Building a reputation Building professional relationships Learning and growing Shoulders of giants
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