26
Publication without tears: tips for aspiring authors Emma Coonan & Liz McCarthy Journal of Information Literacy

Publication without tears: tips for aspiring authors - Emma Coonan & Liz McCarthy

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: Publication without tears: tips for aspiring authors - Emma Coonan & Liz McCarthy

Publication without tears:

tips for aspiring authorsEmma Coonan & Liz McCarthyJournal of Information Literacy

Page 2: Publication without tears: tips for aspiring authors - Emma Coonan & Liz McCarthy

We plan to look at

• Where and what to publish

• What is a journal article anyway?

• Writing for the Journal of Information Literacy

• Peer review, copyediting and publication processes

• Writing (as) process

Page 3: Publication without tears: tips for aspiring authors - Emma Coonan & Liz McCarthy

• What is your story? Who is your audience?

• Current research project? Could you publish something based on your literature review, findings from a pilot project, final project conclusions?

• Early idea/exploration?Share reflections/interim findings via conferences or blogs

• Writing by yourself or with a co-author?

Where and what to publish?

Page 4: Publication without tears: tips for aspiring authors - Emma Coonan & Liz McCarthy

Where and what to publish?

• Read journal author guidelines and previous articles

• Consider journal mission and scopeE.g. JIL focuses on information literacy –not library skills, libraries or teaching in general

• Peer-reviewed article? Shorter project report?

• Consider writing conference reports, book reviews ... or becoming a peer reviewer

Page 5: Publication without tears: tips for aspiring authors - Emma Coonan & Liz McCarthy

Activity 1:What is a journal

article?

Page 6: Publication without tears: tips for aspiring authors - Emma Coonan & Liz McCarthy

Presentation vs. paper

• Structure – conventional divisions

• Tone and register – more formal

• Use of evidence – more overt, interwoven

• Scope and purpose

Conference papers – more visual, less detailed, more informal style, less ‘dense’

Written articles – longer and more detailed, use of literature, methodology, specific structure

Page 7: Publication without tears: tips for aspiring authors - Emma Coonan & Liz McCarthy

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

Page 8: Publication without tears: tips for aspiring authors - Emma Coonan & Liz McCarthy

What/why/how

• What is your research?

• Why are you doing it?

• How are you doing it?

Page 9: Publication without tears: tips for aspiring authors - Emma Coonan & Liz McCarthy

Activity 2:What/why/how of your

research

Page 10: Publication without tears: tips for aspiring authors - Emma Coonan & Liz McCarthy

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?

Page 11: Publication without tears: tips for aspiring authors - Emma Coonan & Liz McCarthy

Journal of Information Literacy• International, peer-reviewed, gold open access• Explores IL in all its forms• Aimed at diverse communities of IL practice• Published twice a year (June and December)

JIL welcomes contributions that push the boundaries of IL beyond the educational setting and examine this phenomenon as a continuum between those involved in its development and delivery and those benefiting from its provision.

Page 12: Publication without tears: tips for aspiring authors - Emma Coonan & Liz McCarthy

JIL editors

Managing Editor: Cathie Jackson

Editor-in-Chief: Jane Secker

Book review editor: Ian Hunter

Emma Coonan

Page 13: Publication without tears: tips for aspiring authors - Emma Coonan & Liz McCarthy

• Relevance to JIL – within our scope?

• Originality and interest to our audience – useful contribution to knowledge or good practice?

• Title and abstract – appropriate wording and length and informative?

• Methodology – appropriate?

• 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

Page 14: Publication without tears: tips for aspiring authors - Emma Coonan & Liz McCarthy

Accept for publication without amendment (almost never!)

Revisions required

Major revisions required followed by peer review

Resubmit elsewhere

Decline submission

Reviewer recommendations

Page 15: Publication without tears: tips for aspiring authors - Emma Coonan & Liz McCarthy

• Make a list of all the actions needed of you Can you address them? If so, how?

• If you can’t, 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

• If there were comments you didn’t address, because you couldn’t or because you disagreed with them, say why(you may want to discuss with us earlier in revision process)

• Remember that addressing these comments may unearth other suggested changes – several rounds of revisions may be required

What to do with reviewer comments

Page 16: Publication without tears: tips for aspiring authors - Emma Coonan & Liz McCarthy

JIL copyeditors

Lizzie Seals

Sharon Lawler

Helen Bader

Lisa Hutchins

Page 17: Publication without tears: tips for aspiring authors - Emma Coonan & Liz McCarthy

JIL Copyeditors’ advice• Use the required template

o Use the correct font and size - eg Arial 11pt for body text in JIL (if using the template, this should be default)

o Number all section headings using the multilevel list optiono Format headings as per the style sheet

• Format your references using the journal’s house styleo JIL uses Harvard style as used by Cardiff Universityo Remember to convert any EndNote references to text

• Ensure all in-text citations are given a full reference at the end, and that all references are cited in the text

Page 18: Publication without tears: tips for aspiring authors - Emma Coonan & Liz McCarthy

• Define acronyms and abbreviations on first use

• Ensure diagrams and images are copyright-free and acknowledge their source

• And specifically for JIL:o Use British spellingo Avoid footnotes – either incorporate information into the

text or list non-cited information and websites under Resources and cited sources under References

o List author name, affiliation and email address for each author, in the order given in the metadata, on the article loaded for copyediting

JIL Copyeditors’ advice

Page 19: Publication without tears: tips for aspiring authors - Emma Coonan & Liz McCarthy

Once it is published

• Celebrate!

• Tell the world – use the DOI link

• Add it to your repository, acknowledging where published

Page 20: Publication without tears: tips for aspiring authors - Emma Coonan & Liz McCarthy

Activity 3:Turning a short report into a

peer-reviewed article

Page 21: Publication without tears: tips for aspiring authors - Emma Coonan & Liz McCarthy

Writing process: eating the elephant• Keep focused

Pin your central hypothesis or question and your what/why/how analysis by your desk. Make sure that everything you write is directed towards supporting and answering the question

• ‘Flatpack’ your writing Dive in wherever you feel you have something to say. Write up the section which comes most naturally and compile the sections later

• Free-writingDon’t wait until you know what you want to say – get ideas out of your head so you can reflect on and develop them

Page 22: Publication without tears: tips for aspiring authors - Emma Coonan & Liz McCarthy

• Writing is an iterative process Draft, redraft, draft again (and see Lamott on first drafts!)

• Find a good proofreader This could be a colleague, friend or family member, but always get someone else to read it through!

• Learn to read critically to help you write critically Become a book reviews writer or a peer reviewer – or ‘buddy up’ with another aspiring author and support each other

Writing process: eating the elephant

Page 23: Publication without tears: tips for aspiring authors - Emma Coonan & Liz McCarthy

http://patthomson.net/

http://explorationsofstyle.com/

Page 25: Publication without tears: tips for aspiring authors - Emma Coonan & Liz McCarthy

Activity 4:Think about your next steps towards getting published.List up to 3 ideas about how you could follow up from this session and discuss in pairs.

Page 26: Publication without tears: tips for aspiring authors - Emma Coonan & Liz McCarthy

Further resourcesGordon, Rachel Singer. 2004. The Librarian's Guide to Writing for Publication. Lanham, Md.: Scarecrow Press.

HEA-ICS. 2007. Writing for publication http://www.ics.heacademy.ac.uk/events/displayevent.php?id=187

JIL Author Guidelines. http://ojs.lboro.ac.uk/ojs/index.php/JIL/about/submissions#authorGuidelines

Nicholson, S. 2006. Writing your first scholarly article: a guide for budding authors in librarianship. Information Technology and Libraries 25(2) 108-111. Available at: http://bibliomining.com/nicholson/firstarticle.htm

Guhin, Jeff. 2012. How to turn a conference paper into an article (for early grad students). Available at: http://jeffreyguhin.blogspot.co.uk/2012/02/how-to-turn-conference-paper-into.html