Publication without tears: tips for aspiring authors Emma Coonan Journal of Information Literacy
Aug 13, 2015
Have you submitted an article for publication?
Do you edit or peer review already?
You might enjoy this Scholarly Kitchen article if so.
• Relevance to the journal’s remit
• Originality and interest to our audience
• Title and abstract
• Methodology
• Use of literature and referencing
• Clarity of expression and structure
Peer review criteria
• Relevance to the journal’s remit – research- or practice-based investigations into information literacy
• Originality and interest to our audience - useful contribution to knowledge or good practice?
• Title and abstract – appropriate wording and length and informative?
• Methodology – appropriate? rigorous?
• Use of literature and referencing – good analysis of literature? Good referencing or signs of plagiarism?
• Clarity of expression and structure – clear exposition of argument? Logical structure? Spell out acronyms, avoid jargon!
Peer review criteria
Accept for publication without amendment - almost never!
Revisions required
Major revisions required followed by peer review
Resubmit elsewhere
Decline submission
Reviewer recommendations
• Make a list of all the actions needed of you
• If you can’t meet them, discuss this with the editors
• Revise the paper and resubmit it
• If there were comments you didn’t address, because you couldn’t or because you disagreed with them, say why
• Remember that addressing these comments may unearth other suggested changes – several rounds of revisions may be required
What to do with reviewer comments
• Make a list of all the actions needed of you Can you address them? If so, how?
• If you can’t meet them, discuss this with the editors Tell us why (you can take your article elsewhere!)
• Revise the paper and resubmit it with a covering letter detailing how you have addressed each comment
You might also like this Storify.
What to do with reviewer comments
JIL Copyeditors’ advice
• Use the publication template if there is one
• Define acronyms and abbreviations on first use
• Format your references using the journal’s house style
• Ensure all in-text citations are given a full reference at the end, and that all references are cited in the text• Ensure diagrams and images are copyright-cleared
and attributed
Once it is published
• Add it to your institutional repository if publisher permits
• Tell the world - use the DOI where possible
Light
gre
en L
ego b
rick
by S
tilfehle
r, C
C
BY-
SA
3.0
You might find this blog post useful too.
What could you publish?
• Literature review
• Data
• Your ‘beloved darlings’
Think of publishing something from your research, not your thesis
Tell your reader …
• Context - you’re contributing to a dialogue
• Approach and method that underpin the research
• Rigour - the validity of your approach and findings
• What/why/how of your research
What/why/how• What is your research?
What questions does it address (or ask)?
• Why are you doing it?
Why does it matter? What will it change?What interests/frustrates/niggles you about the topic?
• How are you doing it?
What’s your approach or method? How does it frame your findings?How does it help you mitigate bias?
• Keep focused
Pin your hypothesis or question and your what/why/how
analysis by your desk.
Everything you write is directed towards answering the
question.
• Flatpack it
Dive in wherever you feel you have something to say.
Write up the section which comes most naturally and
compile the sections later.
• It’s iterative
Draft, redraft, draft again (and see Lamott on first drafts!)
• Find (or bribe) a proofreader
This could be a colleague, friend or family member, but
always get someone else to read it through!
• Read critically to help you write critically
Become a reviewer – or ‘buddy up’ with another aspiring
author and support each other
• Free-writing
Don’t wait until you know what you want to say – get
ideas out of your head so you can reflect on and develop
them
• Join (or start) a writers’ group
You can read why I love them in this blog post.
• Break it down
It’s like eating an elephant!
Emma Coonan, Editor-in-ChiefJournal of Information Literacy
Twitter: LibGoddess