-
Join 12.9K other subscribers
patter on facebook
-
Recent Posts
- a musing on email signatures
- creativity and giving up on knowing it all
- white ants and research education
- Anticipation
- research as creative practice – possibility thinking
- research as – is – creative practice
- On MAL-attribution
- a brief word on academic mobility
- Key word – claim
- key words – contribution
- research key words – significance
- a thesis is not just a display
Copyright
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.SEE MY CURATED POSTS ON WAKELET
LOOKING FOR POSTS ON WRITING FOR JOURNALS? REVISING AND EDITING? GIVING FEEDBACK AND REVIEWING? READING? GIVING A CONFERENCE PAPER? VISIT MY WAKES ON https://wakelet.com/@patter- abstracts academic blogging academic book academic writing acwrimo argument authority in writing blogging blogging about blogging books book writing chapter co-writing conclusion conference conference papers conference presentation contribution data data analysis doctoral research early career researchers editing examiner introduction journal journal article literature mapping literature review literature reviews literature themes methods chapter peer review PhD planning publishing reader reading research research methods revision revision strategy starting the PhD supervision Tate Summer School theory thesis time Uncategorized voice
Top Posts & Pages
- a musing on email signatures
- aims and objectives - what's the difference?
- writing a bio-note
- I can't find anything written on my topic... really?
- use a structured abstract to help write and revise
- connecting chapters/chapter conclusions
- about me
- five ways to structure a literature review
- connecting chapters/chapter introductions
- headings and subheadings – it helps to be specific
Meta
Search Results for: journal article
Why journal articles are rejected
This is an old post from May 2013. I get asked about rejection a lot so it seemed worth recycling it. There are some very common reasons why journal papers get rejected, often by the editor. They don’t even make … Continue reading
Posted in academic writing, journal article, rejection
Tagged academic writing, journal article, Pat Thomson, rejection
1 Comment
Writing a journal article – 8 steps to So What and Now What
This post is a generalisation. Be warned. But the general stuff in this post does hold for most things you’ll write for most journals. Just not all. The message in this post is simply this – journals generally do not … Continue reading
Posted in argument, journal, journal article, now what, so what
Tagged academic writing, argument, Pat Thomson, So What Now What
5 Comments
why journal articles get rejected – #3
Every journal article is expected to make a contribution. The writer has to say something that adds to the conversation about the particular topic in the target journal. And through this addition, they participate in the discussion in the field. … Continue reading
Posted in contribution, journal article, peer review, rejection, significance
Tagged contribution, journal article, Pat Thomson, peer reveiw, rejection, significance
1 Comment
why journal articles get rejected #1
Some journal articles never get sent out for review. They are rejected at the outset by the Editor. Why is this? Well, there’s a short and a somewhat longer and a very extensive answer to this question. The short answer … Continue reading
why journal articles are rejected #2
Here’s the thing. Journal Editors say that one of the major reasons that papers are rejected is when the writer is not clear about their point, and their argument. Accepted journal articles have a point to make. They work with … Continue reading
Posted in argument, journal article, rejection, the point
Tagged argument, journal article, Pat Thomson, rejection, structured abstract, the point
Leave a comment
There are no writing “rules”
Look. I don’t really want to start the new year off with a rant. But I just can’t sit on this any longer. I’m climbing onto my soap box now, taking up my megaphone and shouting. THERE ARE NO RULES FOR … Continue reading
Posted in conventions, IMRAD, journal article
Tagged academic writing, academic writing conventions, IMRAD, Pat Thomson
2 Comments
writing a journal article – identifying “the two paper problem”
If you’re writing a journal article, you need write it so that you make one big point. Right? One unavoidable, spelled out, take home message. There may be nuancing of the point, of course. But there’s basically just the one. … Continue reading
Posted in argument, journal article, the point
Tagged academic writing, argument, journal article, Pat Thomson, the point
2 Comments
concluding a paper
Conclusions can be hard. There are a few big traps that conclusion writers can fall into. In order to avoid them, try the following three things. Deep breath. It’s good to be bold. The conclusion generally requires bigging up what … Continue reading
Posted in conclusion, journal article, so what
Tagged conclusion, journal article, Pat Thomson, so what
3 Comments
make a poster – it may also help you write a paper
Academic posters. They are a thing. You can find academic posters at a lot of conferences. Ah, conferences. Remember when we had face to face conferences? Oh, that seems like a long time ago now – but when we had … Continue reading
Posted in academic writing, conference papers, drafting, poster
Tagged academic poster, academic writing, conference paper, drafting, journal article, Pat Thomson
2 Comments
writing for publication – finding an angle and an argument
This is a story, a my story, which leads to eight pointers about writing for publication. I’m currently writing a paper. Well, yes, always writing something. But right now it’s a paper. A paper designed to do some thinking work … Continue reading