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If "10-point checklist for a successfull manuscript to send for your worrk." is not shown property. Visit the source link above.
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❑ Get rid of every adjective modifying a
relationship. Was x larger than y? Just say so. Saying it was
much larger, or especially tiny, or amazingly
huge adds no information. |
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❑ Replace long words with short words. Good
writing maximizes the content of the message per number of letters
used. Replace long words with short words of equal meaning. Replace
utilization with use. |
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❑
Replace every “differed” or “was different” with the actual,
quantitative relationship. Compare the content per letters used
for the following two sentences: |
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Plants fertilized
with nitrogen differed in height from controls.
Plants fertilized
with nitrogen were 2.5 x taller than
controls. |
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Not only have you conveyed that nitrogen increased
growth, you’ve given a vivid word picture as to how much. In fewer
words! |
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❑ Make sure your Discussion has a caveat
paragraph. Ever study is flawed or makes simplifying
assumptions; every study has a method or result that may be
misinterpreted. Grad students often attempt to hide these flaws.
But, like an untreated cut, such problems can fester in the mind of
a reviewer. Consider inserting a caveat paragraph somewhere in the
middle of the Discussion that thoughtfully addresses at least two
topics. |
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The first is a
plausible mistake a harried reader might make and why it is
incorrect (look for patterns in your friendly reviews to identify
likely candidates). Good writing is good teaching, and good
teachers anticipate the problems of their students.
The second should
confront the biggest weakness of the study, how you tried to
ameliorate it, and perhaps how future work could better tackle it
(in other words, ending on a positive note). Do you want to be the
first person to raise this issue, or would you rather your
reviewers do so? |
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A caveat paragraph depicts a thoughtful author who
is after the truth, not someone who is trying to sell
something. |
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❑
If your Discussion is more than 2x longer than your results, cut it
down. Discussions are not brain dumps, nor are they
opportunities to lay claim in print to every idea you have on the
subject. Careful topical reviewers, by the time they reach the
Discussion, want to know how your results relate to your
hypotheses, the strengths and weaknesses of your results, and
perhaps one or two implications of your results. Focus on these
three tasks, and leave your reviewer wanting more, not flipping
ahead to see when the bibliography begins. |
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❑ Market test your title and abstract. More
and more editors are rejecting papers before they send them out for
review. Reviewers typically accept or decline to review papers on
the basis of the title and abstract. The title and abstract are the
front door to your study. They are the most important parts of the
paper.
Craft them carefully and show them to your friendly reviewers
and
24-hour buddies. |
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❑ Spell check everything.
Natch. |
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❑
Even your
bibliography. Your scientific career is built on a bedrock of
trust. Reviewers want to believe that you have carefully collected
and analyzed your data. However, to a large degree, your reviewer’s
ability to see just how meticulous you are is limited. This is why
typos in the manuscript loom far larger than many beginning
scientists think. And, similarly, why care in constructing your
bibliography–that Latinate names are italicized, that the
journal’s formatting is followed to the letter, that authors names
are spelled correctly–also reflects your ability to conscientiously
manage detail. Will reviewers give you the benefit of the doubt?
Often it’s the little things that decide. |
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❑ Read it aloud. There is no better
way to gauge the flow and logic of a manuscript than to read it
aloud, effectively using your whole brain in the enterprise.
Beginning scientists should do this in three
steps: |
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Read the first sentence of every
paragraph, in sequence, from the Introduction through the
Discussion. If the paper is well written, it should sound like you
are explaining the study to a colleague, albeit in a rather stilted
way. If the paper doesn’t make much sense, it needs work on its
paragraph structure.
Next do it again,
but this time read the first and last sentence of every
paragraph. This should result in greater logical flow–the final
sentence of one paragraph leading into, and often introducing, the
first sentence of the next paragraph. If you find little difference
between this reading and the previous, spend a day or two fixing
the ends of your paragraphs.
Now, after a cup of
coffee, a long walk, or a nice bout of screaming into a pillow,
read the whole paper aloud. Listen for any awkward phrasing,
which will sound like your car engine misfiring. For some reason,
reading the whole manuscript aloud allows you to see it in a new
light, or, more aptly, with fresh
ears. |
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