1 / 14

TIPS FOR PUBLISHING IN WESTERN JOURNALS

TIPS FOR PUBLISHING IN WESTERN JOURNALS. Mark Williams University of Colorado Editor: Arctic, Antarctic, and Alpine Research. Publishing in Western Journals. Why can’t Chinese scientists get published in western Journals?

lixue
Télécharger la présentation

TIPS FOR PUBLISHING IN WESTERN JOURNALS

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. TIPS FOR PUBLISHING IN WESTERN JOURNALS Mark Williams University of Colorado Editor: Arctic, Antarctic, and Alpine Research

  2. Publishing in Western Journals • Why can’t Chinese scientists get published in western Journals? • As editor of AAAR, I reject about 90% of manuscripts submitted from China • Are there lessons that the Chinese can learn that will help them get published in western journals?

  3. Arctic, Antarctic, and Alpine Research has an Impact Factor 0.964. It is ranked number 2 in the Geography category and number 14 in the Environmental Sciences My comments are based in part from my experience as editor of AAAR. I’m also a scientist. Personal China experiences

  4. OVERVIEW • Contrast Chinese and Western cultural approaches to education • Step-by-step instructions on how to write a manuscript for western journals

  5. CHINA • Major economic force • Natural entreprenuership • World-class scientific power • Science education extensive, rigorous

  6. NOT FULFILLING SCIENTIFIC POTENTIAL • Low scientific profile on the world stage • Lost opportunities, both scientifically and technologically • Missed opportunities to improve economy and quality of life of Chinese citizens

  7. ANCIENT SCHOLARS • Respected • Difficult exams • Many hours spent studying • Emphasis on rote learning

  8. Soviet Model • Chinese borrowed the rigid Soviet system in the 1950’s • Soviet model congealed with China’s traditional value of education (not just political thinking) • Traditional education in China, from the Confucious era on, has always been to remove independent thinking • Cultural problem!

  9. AUTHORITY vs CREATIVITY Deference to existing authority and major paradigms is a major barrier to scientific breakthrough MM Poo, Nature, 2004

  10. CONSTRUCTIVE ADVICE • Greater engagement with scientists in the western world • Provide a scientific environment that attracts the best and brightess Chinese students to return from the west to China Campbell, Nature, V428, 2004

  11. Modern Research • Training in scientific thinking • Innovation • Priority setting • Problem solving • Clear communication • Creativity

  12. Essential Tension • Desire to excel • Challenges from colleagues • And STUDENTS! • Competition from peers • Publish or perish • Heart, mind, and soul of scientific inquiry

  13. RAISE QUESTIONS • Challenge existing paradigms • Challenge hypotheses • Challenge concepts • Challenge field methods • Challenge analytical methods • Show how you improve science!

  14. PUBLISHING PAPERS • Builds on this tension of challenging existing paradigms • Incorporates the Chinese strengths of mathematical sophistication and attention to analytical detail • Follows a very prescribed formula that is not taught currently in Chinese schools • Emphasis on creativity, new insights

More Related