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If you can’t be kind, be scholarly Constructive peer reviewing EMMA COONAN JOURNAL OF INFORMATION LITERACY G r o u p h u g b y J o r i s L o u w e s , C C B Y 2 . 0

If you can't be kind, be scholarly. Constructive peer reviewing - Emma Coonan

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Page 1: If you can't be kind, be scholarly. Constructive peer reviewing - Emma Coonan

If you can’t be kind, be scholarlyConstructive peer reviewing

EMMA COONANJOURNAL OF INFORMATION

LITERACY

Group hug by Joris Louw

es, CC BY 2.0

Page 2: If you can't be kind, be scholarly. Constructive peer reviewing - Emma Coonan
Page 3: If you can't be kind, be scholarly. Constructive peer reviewing - Emma Coonan

Aims

• Explore what peer review is and what it’s for• Demystify what it involves• Foster constructive reviewers and critical

friends to scholarship

Page 4: If you can't be kind, be scholarly. Constructive peer reviewing - Emma Coonan

What is peer review anyway?

Page 5: If you can't be kind, be scholarly. Constructive peer reviewing - Emma Coonan

Discussion

1. What is peer review?2. What’s it for?3. What does it not do?

Page 6: If you can't be kind, be scholarly. Constructive peer reviewing - Emma Coonan

Discussion

1. What is peer review?

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Discussion

1. What is peer review?Appraisal of reported research by expert in the fieldMay be ‘double blind’ – author’s name is not revealedMay be 2 or more reviewers

Page 8: If you can't be kind, be scholarly. Constructive peer reviewing - Emma Coonan

Discussion

2. What’s it for?

Page 9: If you can't be kind, be scholarly. Constructive peer reviewing - Emma Coonan

Discussion

2. What’s it for?Verification of reported results as far as possible

Guide the editor in a decision on whether to publishHelp authors make the best possible presentation of their research to their community of practice

Page 10: If you can't be kind, be scholarly. Constructive peer reviewing - Emma Coonan

The $64,000 question

“What’s needed to bring this up to publishable standard?”

The point is not to eliminate but to include

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Discussion

3. What does it not do?

Page 12: If you can't be kind, be scholarly. Constructive peer reviewing - Emma Coonan

Discussion

3. What does it not do?ProofreadReplicate resultsGuarantee truth

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What does it involve?

Page 14: If you can't be kind, be scholarly. Constructive peer reviewing - Emma Coonan

What to look for

• Research informed and evidence based• Designed around an arguable research question• Contextualised with reference to previous and current

advances in IL thinking• Methodologically robust with a demonstrable research design• Investigation not description

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Guess the headings (there are 6!)

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Guess the headings

• Relevance to JIL• Originality and interest to audience• Title and abstract• Methodology• Use of literature and referencing• Clarity of expression and structure

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Outcomes for each criterion

• Appropriate• Needs amendment• Needs major rewriting or adjustment

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Overall recommendation

• Accept for publication without amendment• Revisions required• Major revisions required followed by peer review• Decline submission

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How to look

• Critically and analytically - not descriptively / not at sentence level

• Test for weakness in argument and structure- use the what/why/how framework

• Detached mindset- evaluate integrity of argument, not how far it matches your own view of IL

• Don’t just review what you see- what is the author not saying? What literature hasn’t been cited?

Page 20: If you can't be kind, be scholarly. Constructive peer reviewing - Emma Coonan

Reviewer’s toolkit

Page 21: If you can't be kind, be scholarly. Constructive peer reviewing - Emma Coonan

Reviewer’s toolkit

• JIL’s 4 bullet points

Page 22: If you can't be kind, be scholarly. Constructive peer reviewing - Emma Coonan

Reviewer’s toolkit

• JIL’s 4 bullet pointsQuestion-led, evidence-based investigation

Page 23: If you can't be kind, be scholarly. Constructive peer reviewing - Emma Coonan

Reviewer’s toolkit

• JIL’s 4 bullet pointsQuestion-led, evidence-basd investigation

• The $64,000 question

Page 24: If you can't be kind, be scholarly. Constructive peer reviewing - Emma Coonan

Reviewer’s toolkit

• JIL’s 4 bullet pointsQuestion-led, evidence-based investigation

• The $64,000 question “What’s needed to bring this up to publishable standard?”

Page 25: If you can't be kind, be scholarly. Constructive peer reviewing - Emma Coonan

Reviewer’s toolkit

• JIL’s 4 bullet pointsQuestion-led, evidence-based investigation

• The $64,000 question “What’s needed to bring this up to publishable standard?”

• Strategic reading techniques

Page 26: If you can't be kind, be scholarly. Constructive peer reviewing - Emma Coonan

Reviewer’s toolkit

• JIL’s 4 bullet pointsQuestion-led, evidence-based investigation

• The $64,000 question “What’s needed to bring this up to publishable standard?”

• Strategic reading techniquesIncluding reverse outlining

Page 27: If you can't be kind, be scholarly. Constructive peer reviewing - Emma Coonan

Reviewer’s toolkit

• JIL’s 4 bullet pointsQuestion-led, evidence-based investigation

• The $64,000 question “What’s needed to bring this up to publishable standard?”

• Strategic reading techniquesIncluding reverse outlining

• What/why/how

Page 28: If you can't be kind, be scholarly. Constructive peer reviewing - Emma Coonan

What/why/how

• What is the research?What questions does it address? What contribution does it make?

• Why has it been done?Why does it matter? What will it change?

• How has it been done?What’s the method? How does it frame the findings? How has it helped the researcher mitigate bias?

Page 29: If you can't be kind, be scholarly. Constructive peer reviewing - Emma Coonan

Being constructively critical

Page 30: If you can't be kind, be scholarly. Constructive peer reviewing - Emma Coonan

“I would like to thank you again for all the constructive and benevolent effort that you and your reviewers put into this review and for the graciousness with which you did it.  “I have been through several submission processes that have been quite impersonal and where the critical feedback has been either on the verge of cruelty or entirely neglectful.  You and your reviewers stand apart …”

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Discussion

How can we be helpful and humane?

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On being helpful and humane

• Check your privilege - unequal power relationship• You don’t have to agree, just to check if the position is

adequately grounded and defended

Page 33: If you can't be kind, be scholarly. Constructive peer reviewing - Emma Coonan

On being helpful and humane

• Use what’s well done as a yardstick• “What I think would make this even better is …”

Page 34: If you can't be kind, be scholarly. Constructive peer reviewing - Emma Coonan

On being helpful and humane

• “Show your workings” (be evidence-based!)• Give practical and workable suggestions for how to

implement your amendments

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1. “This article is riddled with assumptions.”2. “The writing is often arrestingly pedestrian.”3. “It is clear that the author has read way too much and

understood way too little.”4. “Something is missing.”5. “Not only does this strike me as the worst kind of

postmodern legerdemain, but if true the statement would transform ethics into a hopelessly muddled enterprise.”

From http://shitmyreviewerssay.tumblr.com/ 

Page 37: If you can't be kind, be scholarly. Constructive peer reviewing - Emma Coonan

Further reading

JIL author guidelinesLowell, Seri (2002) Helpful hints for effective peer reviewingRaff, Jennifer (2013) How to become good at peer reviewSchneiderhan, Erik (2013) Why you gotta be so mean?

Page 38: If you can't be kind, be scholarly. Constructive peer reviewing - Emma Coonan

Emma Coonan, Editor-in-Chief

Journal of Information Literacy

[email protected]

Twitter: LibGoddess