来自编辑——同行评审危机还是新常态?

IF 1.3 4区 社会学 Q2 EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH Journal of Social Work Education Pub Date : 2022-10-02 DOI:10.1080/10437797.2022.2138070
D. Parrish
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In addition to finding meaning in what we do and where we spend our time, it is also important—as with any disaster—to assess the damage and decide what we want to repair. As an editor, I want to highlight the recent crisis in peer review and ask you to consider or reconsider your participation in this process. Like so many other vulnerabilities in societal systems laid bare during the pandemic, the delicate system of peer review that relies on the goodwill, and often free labor of our peers, has pushed this system to a potential breaking point (Dance, 2022; Flaherty, 2022). While there was an exponential increase in journal submissions in 2020 (Else, 2020) and reviews focused on COVID-19 were quicker and more responsive to start, timely peer review has become less reliable in the last year or so (Dance, 2022; Flaherty, 2022). The Journal of Social Work Education (JSWE) also experienced a larger number of submissions, and much fewer reviewers who were available for peer review in the last couple of years. If invited reviewers do not respond in a timely way, it can lengthen the peer-review process by several months. It has been sad to observe this process, particularly when I get e-mails from earlycareer colleagues who depend on timely peer review. As the editor of JSWE, there are times—especially during the pandemic and lately—where we invite eight or more people to review a paper before we secure reviewers. These experiences also hit home as an author. Within the last week, I received a returned manuscript held for 1 year with one of our primary professional journals with no peer review and a note from the editor that it was being released because no peer reviewers would accept it for review. This was particularly disheartening, as it was an article with two early-career colleagues. I invite you to consider your commitment as a peer reviewer as we emerge into this new normal. Peer review is an opportunity to speak into the profession and minimize the chances that a small number of peers, often fewer experts with the necessary breadth of expertise and diverse backgrounds (Dance, 2022), are doing this alone. One prepandemic survey found one-fifth of researchers contribute up to 94% of the reviews (Kovanis et al., 2016). A small number of our peers cannot and should not so narrowly dictate the quality of our professional publications. The quality and validity of our profession’s research depends on high-quality review by experts in the field to catch important errors or problems, help peers improve their work, and reject work or scholarship that is not of high quality. Finally, one’s individual scholarship can benefit from ongoing and consistent peer review, with exposure to the new trends and ideas in a specific area of expertise and an opportunity to learn more from current peer-review practices. I get it. We are all tired and maybe burned out. There has been a priority to focus on the tasks that are essential and considered for tenure, promotion, and merit. However, we must be collectively responsible for not just producing scholarship and research, but also ensuring its quality as a profession. While there is an argument that this work should be compensated (Dance, 2022), this is unlikely in the near future. As the editor of JSWE, my work is not compensated, but I find it an honor and deeply important to contribute to social work scholarship. 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While there was an exponential increase in journal submissions in 2020 (Else, 2020) and reviews focused on COVID-19 were quicker and more responsive to start, timely peer review has become less reliable in the last year or so (Dance, 2022; Flaherty, 2022). The Journal of Social Work Education (JSWE) also experienced a larger number of submissions, and much fewer reviewers who were available for peer review in the last couple of years. If invited reviewers do not respond in a timely way, it can lengthen the peer-review process by several months. It has been sad to observe this process, particularly when I get e-mails from earlycareer colleagues who depend on timely peer review. As the editor of JSWE, there are times—especially during the pandemic and lately—where we invite eight or more people to review a paper before we secure reviewers. These experiences also hit home as an author. Within the last week, I received a returned manuscript held for 1 year with one of our primary professional journals with no peer review and a note from the editor that it was being released because no peer reviewers would accept it for review. This was particularly disheartening, as it was an article with two early-career colleagues. I invite you to consider your commitment as a peer reviewer as we emerge into this new normal. Peer review is an opportunity to speak into the profession and minimize the chances that a small number of peers, often fewer experts with the necessary breadth of expertise and diverse backgrounds (Dance, 2022), are doing this alone. One prepandemic survey found one-fifth of researchers contribute up to 94% of the reviews (Kovanis et al., 2016). A small number of our peers cannot and should not so narrowly dictate the quality of our professional publications. 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引用次数: 0

摘要

这是一个不同寻常的两年半的时间来应对新冠肺炎疫情、对美国种族不公正的清算以及一个严重分裂的社会。由于教学模式的转变、照顾责任、情感支持和指导学生,以及针对疫情限制调整研究,学院教师的工作量更大。所有这些变化都源于我们在这些艰难时期亲身经历的压力。毫不奇怪,在这场全球大流行和其他社会压力的余波中,学术人员需要一些休息、恢复甚至应对倦怠的空间。随着我们的恢复,有必要优先考虑我们最重视的工作。除了在我们所做的事情和我们在哪里度过的时间中找到意义之外,与任何灾难一样,评估损失并决定我们要修复什么也很重要。作为一名编辑,我想强调一下最近同行评审中的危机,并请您考虑或重新考虑您对这一过程的参与。就像疫情期间暴露出的社会系统中的许多其他脆弱性一样,依赖于同行善意和自由劳动的微妙同行评审系统将这一系统推向了一个潜在的崩溃点(Dance,2022;Flaherty,2022)。尽管2020年期刊提交量呈指数级增长(Else,2020),专注于新冠肺炎的评论开始时更快、更具响应性,但在过去一年左右,及时的同行评论变得不那么可靠(Dance,2022;Flaherty,2022)。《社会工作教育杂志》(JSWE)在过去几年中也收到了大量的投稿,可供同行评审的评审员也少得多。如果受邀评审员没有及时做出回应,可能会将同行评审过程延长几个月。观察到这个过程让我很难过,尤其是当我收到职业生涯早期同事的电子邮件时,他们依赖于及时的同行评审。作为JSWE的编辑,有时——尤其是在疫情期间和最近——我们会邀请八个人或更多的人来审查一篇论文,然后再确保审查人员的安全。作为一名作家,这些经历也深深打动了我的心。上周,我收到了一份被退回的手稿,该手稿在我们的一家主要专业期刊上保存了一年,没有经过同行评审,编辑还注意到,由于没有同行评审员接受评审,该手稿将被发布。这尤其令人沮丧,因为这是一篇关于两位早期同事的文章。我邀请你在我们进入这一新常态时,考虑一下你作为同行评审员的承诺。同行评审是一个向专业人士发表意见的机会,可以最大限度地减少少数同行,通常是更少具有必要专业知识广度和不同背景的专家(Dance,2022)独自进行这项工作的机会。一项疫情前调查发现,五分之一的研究人员贡献了高达94%的评论(Kovanis等人,2016)。我们的少数同行不能也不应该如此狭隘地决定我们专业出版物的质量。我们专业研究的质量和有效性取决于该领域专家的高质量审查,以发现重要的错误或问题,帮助同行改进他们的工作,并拒绝不高质量的工作或奖学金。最后,一个人的个人学术可以受益于持续一致的同行评审,接触特定专业领域的新趋势和想法,并有机会从当前的同行评审实践中学习更多。我明白了。我们都累了,也许筋疲力尽。优先关注对任期、晋升和功绩至关重要的任务。然而,我们必须共同负责,不仅要产生学术和研究成果,还要确保其专业质量。虽然有人认为这项工作应该得到补偿(Dance,2022),但这在不久的将来是不可能的。作为JSWE的编辑,我的工作没有报酬,但我觉得为社会工作奖学金做出贡献是一种荣誉,也是非常重要的。如果你继续是《2022年社会工作教育杂志》第58卷第4期619-621https://doi.org/10.1080/10437797.2022.2138070
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From the Editor—A Peer Review Crisis or New Normal?
It has been an unusual two and a half years dealing with the COVID-19 pandemic, the reckoning with racial injustice in the United States, and a deeply divided society. Academic faculty have experienced steeper workloads due to shifting teaching modalities, caregiving responsibilities, emotionally supporting and mentoring students, and adjusting research for pandemic restrictions. All these changes fall on top of the stressors we have experienced personally from these trying times. It is not surprising that in the aftermath of this worldwide pandemic and other societal stressors, academic faculty have needed some room to rest, recover, and even deal with burnout. As we recover, there is a need to prioritize the work that we value most. In addition to finding meaning in what we do and where we spend our time, it is also important—as with any disaster—to assess the damage and decide what we want to repair. As an editor, I want to highlight the recent crisis in peer review and ask you to consider or reconsider your participation in this process. Like so many other vulnerabilities in societal systems laid bare during the pandemic, the delicate system of peer review that relies on the goodwill, and often free labor of our peers, has pushed this system to a potential breaking point (Dance, 2022; Flaherty, 2022). While there was an exponential increase in journal submissions in 2020 (Else, 2020) and reviews focused on COVID-19 were quicker and more responsive to start, timely peer review has become less reliable in the last year or so (Dance, 2022; Flaherty, 2022). The Journal of Social Work Education (JSWE) also experienced a larger number of submissions, and much fewer reviewers who were available for peer review in the last couple of years. If invited reviewers do not respond in a timely way, it can lengthen the peer-review process by several months. It has been sad to observe this process, particularly when I get e-mails from earlycareer colleagues who depend on timely peer review. As the editor of JSWE, there are times—especially during the pandemic and lately—where we invite eight or more people to review a paper before we secure reviewers. These experiences also hit home as an author. Within the last week, I received a returned manuscript held for 1 year with one of our primary professional journals with no peer review and a note from the editor that it was being released because no peer reviewers would accept it for review. This was particularly disheartening, as it was an article with two early-career colleagues. I invite you to consider your commitment as a peer reviewer as we emerge into this new normal. Peer review is an opportunity to speak into the profession and minimize the chances that a small number of peers, often fewer experts with the necessary breadth of expertise and diverse backgrounds (Dance, 2022), are doing this alone. One prepandemic survey found one-fifth of researchers contribute up to 94% of the reviews (Kovanis et al., 2016). A small number of our peers cannot and should not so narrowly dictate the quality of our professional publications. The quality and validity of our profession’s research depends on high-quality review by experts in the field to catch important errors or problems, help peers improve their work, and reject work or scholarship that is not of high quality. Finally, one’s individual scholarship can benefit from ongoing and consistent peer review, with exposure to the new trends and ideas in a specific area of expertise and an opportunity to learn more from current peer-review practices. I get it. We are all tired and maybe burned out. There has been a priority to focus on the tasks that are essential and considered for tenure, promotion, and merit. However, we must be collectively responsible for not just producing scholarship and research, but also ensuring its quality as a profession. While there is an argument that this work should be compensated (Dance, 2022), this is unlikely in the near future. As the editor of JSWE, my work is not compensated, but I find it an honor and deeply important to contribute to social work scholarship. If you have continued to be an JOURNAL OF SOCIAL WORK EDUCATION 2022, VOL. 58, NO. 4, 619–621 https://doi.org/10.1080/10437797.2022.2138070
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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.10
自引率
15.40%
发文量
73
期刊介绍: The Journal of Social Work Education is a refereed professional journal concerned with education in social work, and social welfare. Its purpose is to serve as a forum for creative exchange on trends, innovations, and problems relevant to social work education at the undergraduate, masters", and postgraduate levels. JSWE is published three times a year, in winter (January 15), spring/summer (May 15), and fall (September 15). It is available by subscription and is free with CSWE membership.
期刊最新文献
Defending Discomfort: A Critical Social Work Case Against Trigger Warnings Teaching Note—Integrating Disability-Related Content Within the Interprofessional Education Curriculum: Opportunities and Lessons Learned Teaching Note—Antioppressive Pedagogy in Action: The Undergraduate Research Methods Course Considerations for Marginalized Fathers in Human Behavior and the Social Environment (HBSE) Courses: Insights for Social Work Educators and Students Research Note—Making Peer Review Evidence-Based: It’s Time to Open the “Black Box”
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