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Professor Sally Brown Emerita Professor, Leeds Metropolitan University

Getting journal articles published February 2013 Waterford Institute of Technology www.sally-brown.net. Professor Sally Brown Emerita Professor, Leeds Metropolitan University Adjunct Professor, University of the Sunshine Coast and James Cook University

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Professor Sally Brown Emerita Professor, Leeds Metropolitan University

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  1. Getting journal articles publishedFebruary 2013Waterford Institute of Technologywww.sally-brown.net Professor Sally Brown Emerita Professor, Leeds Metropolitan University Adjunct Professor, University of the Sunshine Coast and James Cook University Visiting Professor University of Plymouth and Liverpool John Moores University Visiting Fellow, University of Northumbria

  2. Why do you want to publish in journals: What matters most to you? • To disseminate useful material and make public meaningful research; • To make a name for yourself and enhance your reputation; • To make you more employable and to demonstrate to your HEI that you are scholarly; • To enter the discourse of your discipline; • Because its really intersting.

  3. Outlets for publications: a hierarchy • journals: international refereed • lesser, UK unrefereed • books scholarly monograph, co-written, edited, co-edited • conference proceedings - refereed • book reviews • conference papers - depends on type • project reports • poster sessions • magazines • textbooks, newspapers • Internet • distance learning materials

  4. What are the points that make a manuscript immediately appealing to you? Ten most important points chosen by editors: • Professional appearance: how it looks. • New/novel treatment of the subject • Very thorough. • Author guidelines followed. • Good writing clarity and style. Noble: Studies in Higher Education 13 1 1989 Publish or Perish: - what 23 Journal Editors have to say

  5. What are the points that make a manuscript immediately appealing to you? Ten most important points chosen by editors: • Relevance of subject. • Title of manuscript. • High-quality abstract. • Seminal piece of work/research. • A controversial subject. Noble: Studies in Higher Education 13 1 1989 Publish or Perish: - what 23 Journal Editors have to say

  6. Ten most common reasons for immediately rejecting a manuscript... • Author guidelines not followed. • Not thorough. • Bad writing: clarity and style. • Subject of no interest to readers. • Poor statistics, tables, figures. Noble: Studies in Higher Education 13 1 1989 Publish or Perish: - what 23 Journal Editors have to say

  7. Ten most common reasons for immediately rejecting a manuscript... • Old subject / manuscript. • Unprofessional appearance. • Title of manuscript. • Too simple - ‘reporting’. • Written at the wrong level. Noble: Studies in Higher Education 13 1 1989 Publish or Perish: - what 23 Journal Editors have to say

  8. Most common advice given by editors when rejecting... • Write clearly, logically and sequentially. • Study and follow the author guidelines. • Have the manuscript critiqued before submission. • Think what readers want to know, not what you want to say. • Be a stickler for detail. Noble: Studies in Higher Education 13 1 1989 Publish or Perish: - what 23 Journal Editors have to say

  9. Most common problems editors experience with manuscripts received... • slight, trivial or low-quality work/research. • inappropriate subject for journal. • poor quality of writing. • failure to follow author guidelines. • presentation/appearance/format.

  10. Referees and reviewers look for the following in manuscripts: • Clarity, coherence, well-written. • Thoroughness. • Research method. • Appropriateness to the journal. • A unique contribution. • Advancement of knowledge. • Importance of subject • Generalisability and validity of results. • Timeliness.

  11. Writing in journals: some suggestions... • Never publish in a vacuum: know where you are aiming to publish your work by carefully reviewing the available outlets in your field. • Every journal has its own particular strengths and preferences, Consider whether your work should best be published in a major academic journal, or perhaps some emerging, less prestigious journal.

  12. Writing in journals: some suggestions... • Some material has a more practical than academic bias. You may consider a practitioners’ journal to be the appropriate vehicle for a particular piece rather than a strictly academic journal. • Assess carefully whether you can match up to the demands of a target journal.

  13. Writing in journals: some suggestions... • Assess what may be attractive to the editor of a journal in the light of recent trends in the publication. Some topics move rapidly in and out of fashion. • It may be that your work has a particular specialist audience, and that it is best placed in a specialist journal.

  14. The ‘ten damn fool questions’ method of getting started... • What am I doing? • Why am I doing it? • What has been done in the past? • What were the effects? • Why was this unsatisfactory? • What have I tried that worked? • What didn’t work so well? • What have I learned from my success and failures? • What can I deduce from what I have done? • What do I plan to do next?

  15. Useful references Black, D. Brown, S. and Race, P.(1998) 500 Tips for Getting Published Kogan Page London Day A (2008) How to Get Research Published in Journals Gower, London Fairbairn, G and Fairbairn S (2005) Writing your abstract: a guide for would be conference presenters Salisbury: APS publishing Kamler, B and Thomson, P. (2006) Helping doctoral students write: pedagogies for supervision, London: Routledge. Noble: Studies in Higher Education Publish or Perish: what 23 Journal Editors have to say Studies in Higher Education, Volume 14, Issue 1 1989 , pages 97 - 102Routledge Sadler R (1984, but multiple subsequent reprints) Up the Publication Road HERDSA Green Guide No 2 Thomson, P. and Kamler, B. (2013) Writing for peer reviewed journals London Routledge

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