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Paul Beaufait

Support for Writing, Research, and Composing with Technology | Institute for Writing an... - 0 views

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    "The Student Center for Research, Writing, and Information Technology (RWIT) is a free service dedicated to helping members of the Dartmouth community develop more effective strategies for generating and organizing their ideas, finding and evaluating research sources, and presenting and revising compositions in a variety of media. "
Paul Beaufait

Schreiber and Duric 14.2 - Praxis: A Writing Center Journal - 0 views

  • Instead, the call for new tutors was announced through social media, and potential tutors were selected after a review of their submitted writing samples and informal interviews. The new tutors then observed tutoring sessions and attended a one-day training organized by the current tutors. The entire recruitment process has been a valuable experience for the current tutors, who trained new staff in an authentic peer-to-peer manner, building their confidence and knowledge (Girgensohn 132)
    • Paul Beaufait
       
      Onboarding process in a community writing center offering face-to-face tutorials for diverse clients and needs.
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    Schreiber, B. R., & Đurić, S. (2017). Alternative Venues: An EFL writing center outside the university. Praxis, 14(2). http://www.praxisuwc.com/schreiber-and-duric
Paul Beaufait

Writing an Effective Abstract for Journal Submission | Rene Tetzner | LinkedIn - 0 views

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    "An academic or scientific abstract should briefly and comprehensively summarise the contents of the paper it precedes. It should not contain information that is not present in the article and it should report, not evaluate, what can be found in the paper" (Abstract, ¶1, 2015.07.11).
Paul Beaufait

MWIS Newsletter - August 2015: I want to write a book... - 0 views

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    "TESOL Press is currently accepting responses to calls as well as unsolicited manuscripts. More information and the proposal form can be found by clicking on the Read & Publish tab on the TESOL webpage and then clicking on Information for Authors."
Paul Beaufait

Impact of Social Sciences - Who, What, Where, When, Why: Using the 5 Ws to communicate ... - 0 views

  • A published paper has an abstract as a way for fellow researchers and students to quickly glance at whether the paper is useful for them. But an abstract is a very short, concise report of the research paper. A lay summary can expand on that and take the important information such as results and make them more prominent.
    • Paul Beaufait
       
      ¶8
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    In this LSE blog post, Andy Tattersall explained the practice and merits of creating lay summaries to expand audiences and increase impacts of research.
Paul Beaufait

Text and Academic Authors Association: Author Resources - 1 views

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    The TAA maintains this list collectively. Some information in it may not be up to date (Copyright 2010 as of 2014.01.16).
Paul Beaufait

Horizon Research Publishing | Home - 0 views

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    Current list of subjects includes: "Medicine & Healthcare, Agriculture & Life Sciences, Engineering, Social Sciences & Humanities, Business & Management, Computer Science & Mathematics, Materials Engineering & Chemistry, Earth & Environmental Sciences, and Physics & Information, Technology" (sidebar, 2013.07.22)
Paul Beaufait

SHERPA/RoMEO - Publisher copyright policies & self-archiving - 0 views

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    "a wonderful search engine that has been around for over a decade now, providing information to authors who want to learn more about the copyright and open access policies of journals" (Lawson, Ask RoMEO…, ProfHacker blog, 2012.10.16)
Paul Beaufait

Ask The Chefs: How Can We Improve the Article Review and Submission Process? | The Scho... - 0 views

  • One challenge I’m considering is how we can better capture and surface information that is currently lost in the submission process. For example, many journals ask for highlights, key findings, implications, publicity/outreach summaries, statements of novelty and so on as part of the submission process, to assist editorial triage and review. Often, this information is never published alongside the article. Why not?
    • Paul Beaufait
       
      When Charlie Rapple joined the crew in The Scholarly Kitchen in Feb. 2015, David Crotty wrote: "Charlie is a co-founder of Kudos, which helps researchers, institutions, funders and publishers maximize the visibility of research (covered in 2013 in this post). Charlie is also the Associate Director of strategic publishing consultancy TBI Communications, Treasurer of UKSG, and an Associate Editor of Learned Publishing" (Welcoming a New Chef into the Kitchen: Charlie Rapple, http://scholarlykitchen.sspnet.org/2015/02/23/welcoming-a-new-chef-into-the-kitchen-charlie-rapple/).
  • Publishers have worked hard over the last decade to streamline the submission process and reduce the time from submission to publication, but this does not address the issue that causes the largest delay, which is having to reformat and resubmit papers to multiple journals.
    • Paul Beaufait
       
      When Michael Clarke started blogging for The Scholarly Kitchen in 2009, he was "currently principal for Clarke Publishing Group." He also had "worked at the American Medical Association, the American Academy of Pediatrics, and the University of Chicago Press" (Welcome Michael Clarke to the Kitchen, http://scholarlykitchen.sspnet.org/2009/06/15/welcome-michael-clarke-to-the-kitchen/).
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    This post provided reflections from multiple perspectives on prospects for streamlining submission and reviewing of scholarly articles. The blog on which it appeared seems to partially fulfil the mission of the Society for Scholarly Publishing (sidebar blurb).
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