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Getting Published A Personal Perspective Peter Hernon, Professor, Simmons College, Boston
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Getting Published A Personal Perspective Peter Hernon, Professor, Simmons College, Boston.

Dec 28, 2015

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Page 1: Getting Published A Personal Perspective Peter Hernon, Professor, Simmons College, Boston.

Getting Published

A Personal Perspective

Peter Hernon, Professor, Simmons College, Boston

Page 2: Getting Published A Personal Perspective Peter Hernon, Professor, Simmons College, Boston.

Topics Covered Today

• Perspectives

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Editor

Author

Improving LIS literature

Developing and implementing a research agenda

Page 3: Getting Published A Personal Perspective Peter Hernon, Professor, Simmons College, Boston.

Types of Publications

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Page 4: Getting Published A Personal Perspective Peter Hernon, Professor, Simmons College, Boston.

Advantages of Being Published

• Making a professional contribution• Adding to knowledge and perhaps practice• Influencing others• Achieving recognition in the profession• Adding to one’s knowledge and experiences• Creating opportunities for one’s self

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Reminder: Publication does not equal cited, read, downloaded

Page 5: Getting Published A Personal Perspective Peter Hernon, Professor, Simmons College, Boston.

Components of a “Research” Study Submitted for Publication

• Perhaps an abstract and a brief background• Reflective Inquiry

• Procedures

• Limitations• Findings

• Discussion• Conclusion• References and Appendices

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Problem statement, including study’s value; literature review, including relevant theory; objectives, research questions, hypotheses

Research design, methodology(ies), data quality

Appropriate data analysis

Page 6: Getting Published A Personal Perspective Peter Hernon, Professor, Simmons College, Boston.

Publishing in a Journal?

• Which one?– Peer-reviewed?

• Double blind review?

• How decide on a journal?• Is topic appropriate to readership• Impact of journal on profession

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OR, HOW ABOUT PLACEMENT IN “OPEN ACCESS” SOURCE?

Page 7: Getting Published A Personal Perspective Peter Hernon, Professor, Simmons College, Boston.

Editor and Reviewer Expectations

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– Demonstrate effective inclusion of components of research study

• Well written• Break new ground• Strong support of study value• Adhere to journal style and submission

requirements

Page 8: Getting Published A Personal Perspective Peter Hernon, Professor, Simmons College, Boston.

Written Presentation—Some Reminders

• Separate Findings from Discussion• Conclusion is not a summary• Sloppiness

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Repetition of the same word (or thoughts)

Typos and misspelling (even in citations)

Errors in citations

Mismatch between text references and bibliography

Page 9: Getting Published A Personal Perspective Peter Hernon, Professor, Simmons College, Boston.

Written Presentation (continued)

• Awkward writing

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Verb/noun disagreement

Incorrect verb tense

Dense writing, use of passive voice and personal pronouns

Lack of transition between sentences and paragraphs

Page 10: Getting Published A Personal Perspective Peter Hernon, Professor, Simmons College, Boston.

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Page 11: Getting Published A Personal Perspective Peter Hernon, Professor, Simmons College, Boston.

Common Reasons for Rejection

• Stage One (Time of submission)

Perhaps revision necessary before ready for review

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•Paper outside scope of journal—not a good fit

•Poor writing

Page 12: Getting Published A Personal Perspective Peter Hernon, Professor, Simmons College, Boston.

More Reasons

• During review

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•Poor scholarship or weaknesses in developing and “bonding” research components

•Few new insights emerge

•Lack of generalization—or “how we done it good”

•Failure to address “so what” in justifying study value

Page 13: Getting Published A Personal Perspective Peter Hernon, Professor, Simmons College, Boston.

How Might LIS Research Be Improved?

• Authors– Better adherence to components of research

• As

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Problem statement

Literature review

Page 14: Getting Published A Personal Perspective Peter Hernon, Professor, Simmons College, Boston.

Literature Review

• Places the problem statement in the context of previous knowledge, identifies variables that previous investigations have found significant or insignificant, and suggests factors to consider in setting the procedures for a research proposal

• Evaluates past research in the context of the problem statement and the procedures

• Alerts the researcher and the readers about “danger signs” which previous research encountered (e.g., a low response rate).

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Page 15: Getting Published A Personal Perspective Peter Hernon, Professor, Simmons College, Boston.

Literature Review (continued)

• More than a descriptive list of the material available, or a set of summaries

• Organized around and directly related to the problem statement or theme, must synthesize results into a summary of what is and is not known, must identify areas of disagreement or controversy in the literature, and should present insights useful in setting up a study

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Page 16: Getting Published A Personal Perspective Peter Hernon, Professor, Simmons College, Boston.

Literature Review (continued)

• Indicates what has been published on a topic by scholars and researchers. It neither summarizes findings nor identifies all the literature produced on a topic; instead, keep the focus on the problem statement itself. The author makes a judgment call concerning which works to include

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Page 17: Getting Published A Personal Perspective Peter Hernon, Professor, Simmons College, Boston.

Literature Review (continued)

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What is the scope of my literature review? What types of publications am I using (e.g., journals, books, government documents, popular media)? What disciplines are relevant to my study or review?

Does the literature review contain relevant works, regardless of the literature in which they appear?

Have I related the works to my theme or indicated how they apply to what I am studying? Have I critically analyzed and synthesized the literature I use? In other words, do not limit the review to a rote listing of study findings—-relate the literature to your problem statement, methodology, or report theme.

Have I organized the review in a logical manner, with good transition between sentences and paragraphs?

Do my citations conform to required style manual?

Page 18: Getting Published A Personal Perspective Peter Hernon, Professor, Simmons College, Boston.

Better Use of Applicable TheoryExamples

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Page 19: Getting Published A Personal Perspective Peter Hernon, Professor, Simmons College, Boston.

More on Authors

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Include more cross-disciplinary and international literature

Don’t mischaracterize literature

Include relevant theory/model

Attract broader readership, including those outside LIS

Page 20: Getting Published A Personal Perspective Peter Hernon, Professor, Simmons College, Boston.

Journals

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Have reviewers (and editors) who truly understand what research is—application of components of research

Page 21: Getting Published A Personal Perspective Peter Hernon, Professor, Simmons College, Boston.

Envisioning Your Own Research

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Develop a research agenda

Select from itEnsure you select something important that will hold your interest

Page 22: Getting Published A Personal Perspective Peter Hernon, Professor, Simmons College, Boston.

Accomplishments PeopleTransformation

abilities

Directors

Senior management team

Other managers

Professional/support staff

Meet challenges

Develop as leaders and change agents

Deal with uncertainty, stress, and burnout

Engage in mentoring

Library Engagement beyond library

A learning organization

Service leadership

Team

Effectiveness

Accountability

Creation of shared vision

Partnerships (campus, other libraries)

Student outcomes

Student learning outcomes

Meeting customer needs and expectations

Transparency

Explaining

Leadership recognition

renewal

mentoring

traits

organizationalculture

judgment calls

Planning, goal setting, evaluation, reporting

Talent management

Example: Research Agenda

Page 23: Getting Published A Personal Perspective Peter Hernon, Professor, Simmons College, Boston.

Envisioning Your Own Research

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Page 24: Getting Published A Personal Perspective Peter Hernon, Professor, Simmons College, Boston.

Readings

• From Library & Information Science Research:

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“What Is a Problem Statement?” 29 (2007): 307-309

“Reading Literature and Literature Reviews,” 29(4)(2007): 451-454 (Juris Dilevko)

“A Research Study’s Reflective Inquiry,” 30 (2008): 163-164

“Procedures: Research Design,” 31 (2009), forthcoming

“Reliability and Validity,” 31 (2009), forthcoming

Page 25: Getting Published A Personal Perspective Peter Hernon, Professor, Simmons College, Boston.

• See also works such as

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those from Sage

or

Powell and Connaway, or Joe Matthews (Libraries Unlimited)