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Yokohama International School How to Get Published (in Education) Dr Mary Hayden 2 June 2011
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When should you publish? Where should you publish? How should you go about publishing?
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When should you publish? If you have a good (education-related) idea worth sharing more widely If you can write clearly and engagingly (or know someone who can help you to do so – either as a joint author or ‘critical friend’) If you’re prepared for/interested in others discussing your ideas
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Where should you publish? Decide BEFORE you start writing! Depends on: the idea/the evidence to support the idea how many words you want to write the audience you want to share your ideas with
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How should you go about publishing? Think about: what you want to write about why you want to write about it who you want to tell about it where you’d like to see it published
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To help you decide …… publishing books is generally much more difficult to get into than publishing in journals or magazines look at back copies of any journals/magazines you’re considering (to get a ‘feel’ for what’s required) read the ‘notes for contributors’ (if there are any) – make explicit what the Editor’s looking for (length/style/topics/deadlines etc) consider contacting the Editor to ask if they’d be interested – in principle – in a piece on the topic you have in mind (after steps 2 and 3 above)
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While you’re writing …… Remember the audience you’re writing for (tone/style/structure) Remember the ‘notes for contributors’ Remember that any piece of writing needs ‘crafting’ (drafting/re-drafting/re-drafting again …..) Try to allow enough time to be able to leave it for a week or two – so you can see the earlier draft through ‘fresh eyes’ Ask a critical friend to read what you think is a good draft Be prepared to revise it later (especially for an academic journal)
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Peer review process: usually along these lines: Author submits article through designated procedure Editor judges if there’s a prima facie case for consideration (topic, length, style etc): if not, will reject If there is, anonymised article is sent out to 2 or 3 reviewers (‘blind’) for response to Editor Editor makes judgement, based on reviewers’ comments, whether to accept outright, reject outright, or accept subject to modification – and feeds back to author accordingly
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Some golden rules NEVER submit the same piece of writing for consideration by more than one publication at the same time … but it’s OK to write for different types of publication, in different styles (usually different lengths), about the same topic Be patient – the process (especially where peer review is involved) takes time Remember your writing may be read in 20 years’ time (or more) – avoid use of (eg) ‘now’ and ‘last year’
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Some options ‘professional’ journals: experience-based writing (longer pieces) [reviewed by Editor, possibly with support of small editorial board] ‘professional’ magazines: experience-based writing (shorter pieces: may include photos) [reviewed by Editor, possibly with support of small editorial board] ‘academic’ journals: research-based writing (empirically- or literature-based) [peer reviewed]
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In the context of international education (for example)…. Professional journal: International Schools Journal(~3,000) (published by John Catt on behalf of CIS/ECIS) Professional magazine: IS magazine(~1,000) (published by John Catt on behalf of CIS/ECIS) Professional magazine: IB World(~500-1,200) (published by Haymarket, for IB) Academic journal: Journal of Research in (~4-7,000) International Education (published by Sage)
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Some Details and Contacts IS magazine: http://www.ecis.org/page.cfm?p=339http://www.ecis.org/page.cfm?p=339 Editor: Dr Caroline Ellwood [carolineellwood@ecis.org] International Schools Journal: http://www.ecis.org/page.cfm?p=335 http://www.ecis.org/page.cfm?p=335 Editor: Dr Caroline Ellwood [carolineellwood@ecis.org]
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Some Details and Contacts cont … IB World: www.ibo.org/ibworld/www.ibo.org/ibworld/ Editor: Robert Jeffery [editor@ibo.org] JRIE: www.uk.sagepub.com/journals/Journal201574www.uk.sagepub.com/journals/Journal201574 Editor: Dr Mary Hayden [m.c.hayden@bath.ac.uk] or Prof Kay Margetts [ k.margetts@unimelb.edu.au]
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Some interesting issues Increasing numbers of publications available online (as well as in hard copy) – or only online What do we mean by a ‘publication’? How does disseminating ideas through traditional forms of publishing relate to disseminating ideas via, eg, twitter, blogs, ….? ‘Self publishing’ speeds things up – but skips the critical review (and the editorial support). [Care!]
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Happy writing! Dr Mary Hayden Email: m.c.hayden@bath.ac.uk
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