IADSR International Conference 2012 Post Conference Workshop Lahore

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IADSR International Conference 2012 Post Conference Workshop Lahore, Pakistan 1 May 2012

IADSR International Conference 2012 Post Conference Workshop Lahore, Pakistan 1 May 2012

Writing a Journal Article: Section by Section Barbara Gastel, MD, MPH Author. AID at

Writing a Journal Article: Section by Section Barbara Gastel, MD, MPH Author. AID at INASP (www. authoraid. info) and Texas A&M University

Overview • • • Using journals’ instructions to authors Structuring a journal article Writing

Overview • • • Using journals’ instructions to authors Structuring a journal article Writing effectively in English Learning more: some resources Along the way: – Open discussion – Small-group work

Preliminary Questions • Experience – Have you written an article reporting research? – Have

Preliminary Questions • Experience – Have you written an article reporting research? – Have you published such an article? • Materials—have you brought the following? – The instructions to authors from a journal in which you hope to publish a paper – An example of a paper published in this journal – A draft of a paper about your own research

Using a Journal’s Instructions to Authors • Read the instructions to authors before starting

Using a Journal’s Instructions to Authors • Read the instructions to authors before starting to prepare your paper. • Consult the instructions while preparing your paper. • Check the instructions again before submitting your paper.

What are some questions that a journal’s instructions may answer?

What are some questions that a journal’s instructions may answer?

Some Questions the Instructions May Answer • What categories of article does the journal

Some Questions the Instructions May Answer • What categories of article does the journal publish? • What is the maximum length of articles? • What is the maximum length of abstracts? • What sections should the article include? What are the guidelines for each? • What guidelines for writing style should be followed?

Some Questions (cont) • How many figures and tables are allowed? What are the

Some Questions (cont) • How many figures and tables are allowed? What are the requirements for them? • In what format should references appear? Is there a maximum number of references? • In what electronic format should the paper be prepared? • How should the paper be submitted?

Some Browsing • A resource: Instructions to Authors in the Health Sciences (http: //mulford.

Some Browsing • A resource: Instructions to Authors in the Health Sciences (http: //mulford. meduohio. edu/instr/) • Examples of journals’ instructions to authors • Uniform requirements for manuscripts submitted to biomedical journals (http: //www. icmje. org/)

Small-Group Exercise • Look at some instructions to authors that you or others brought

Small-Group Exercise • Look at some instructions to authors that you or others brought or accessed. – What kinds of information do they contain? – What else do you notice about them? • Note and discuss questions you have about instructions to authors. • Be ready to present observations and questions to the full group.

Discussion of the Small-Group Exercise

Discussion of the Small-Group Exercise

Beyond the Instructions • Look at some recent issues of the journal. • In

Beyond the Instructions • Look at some recent issues of the journal. • In the journal, look at some papers that present research analogous to yours. • Using such articles as models can help you gear your paper to the journal.

Small-Group Exercise • Look at a journal article that you or someone else brought

Small-Group Exercise • Look at a journal article that you or someone else brought or accessed. • What are some things about this article that might be good to imitate if you write an article for the same journal?

Discussion of the Small-Group Exercise

Discussion of the Small-Group Exercise

Structuring a Journal Article

Structuring a Journal Article

Preparing a journal article: largely a matter of organization

Preparing a journal article: largely a matter of organization

A Common Format for Journal Articles: IMRAD • • • Introduction: Methods: Results: And

A Common Format for Journal Articles: IMRAD • • • Introduction: Methods: Results: And Discussion: What was the question? How did you try to answer it? What did you find? What does it mean?

A More Complete View • • • (Title) (Authors) (Abstract) Introduction Methods Results Discussion

A More Complete View • • • (Title) (Authors) (Abstract) Introduction Methods Results Discussion (Acknowledgments) (References)

Some Other Structures • IRDAM (with methods at end) • IMRAD RAD. . .

Some Other Structures • IRDAM (with methods at end) • IMRAD RAD. . . (with combined or alternating results and discussion) • Other

Questions • What is the usual structure of journal articles in your research field?

Questions • What is the usual structure of journal articles in your research field? • What is the structure of an article that you or a group member brought?

Title • The fewest possible words that adequately indicate the contents of the paper

Title • The fewest possible words that adequately indicate the contents of the paper • Important in literature searching • Should not include extra words, such as “A Study of” or “Observations on” • Should be specific enough • Generally should not include abbreviations • (Running title: short version of title—appears at tops of pages)

Mini-Exercise • Look at the title of a journal article that you or a

Mini-Exercise • Look at the title of a journal article that you or a group member brought. • Do you think it’s a good title? Why or why not?

Authors • Those with important intellectual contributions to the work • Often listed from

Authors • Those with important intellectual contributions to the work • Often listed from greatest contributions to least • In some fields, head of research group often is listed last • In some fields, listed alphabetically • Useful to list one’s name the same way on every paper

The Abstract • An important part of the paper – Relatively widely read –

The Abstract • An important part of the paper – Relatively widely read – Used to decide whether to read the rest of the paper – Gives editors, reviewers, others a first impression • Briefly summarizes the paper • Should be organized like the paper (for example, in a miniature version of the IMRAD format) • Some journals have structured abstracts (with standardized headings).

Mini-Exercise • Look at the abstract of a journal article that you or a

Mini-Exercise • Look at the abstract of a journal article that you or a group member brought. • Is it structured (with headings in it) or unstructured? • How is it organized?

A Note on Abstracts • First to be read • Last to be written

A Note on Abstracts • First to be read • Last to be written or revised

Orders of Reading and Writing Sections of a Paper • People read the sections

Orders of Reading and Writing Sections of a Paper • People read the sections of journal papers in various orders. (What does that imply for how to write such papers? ) • You can write the sections of a paper in any order. • A convenient order in which to write the main sections: methods, results, discussion, introduction

Methods

Methods

Purposes of the Methods Section • To allow others to replicate what you did

Purposes of the Methods Section • To allow others to replicate what you did – In order to test it – In order to do further research • To allow others to evaluate what you did – To determine whether the conclusions seem valid – To determine whether the findings seem applicable to other situations

Methods: Basic Information to Include • In most cases, overview of study design •

Methods: Basic Information to Include • In most cases, overview of study design • Identification of (if applicable) – Equipment, organisms, reagents, etc used (and sources thereof) – Populations – Approval of human or animal research by an appropriate committee – Statistical methods

Methods: Amount of Detail to Use • For well-known methods: name of method, citation

Methods: Amount of Detail to Use • For well-known methods: name of method, citation of reference • For methods previously described but not well known: brief description of method, citation of reference • For methods that yourself devise: relatively detailed description

Methods: The Words and More • Should be written in past tense • In

Methods: The Words and More • Should be written in past tense • In some journals, may include subheads (which can help readers) • May include tables and figures—for example: – Flowcharts – Diagrams of apparatus – Tables of experimental conditions

Questions? Comments? Additions?

Questions? Comments? Additions?

Results

Results

The Results Section • The core of the paper • Often includes tables, figures,

The Results Section • The core of the paper • Often includes tables, figures, or both • Should summarize findings rather than providing data in great detail • Should present results but not comment on them • (Note: Some journals combine the Results and the Discussion. )

Verb Tense for the Results Section: Past Tense Examples: – A total of 417

Verb Tense for the Results Section: Past Tense Examples: – A total of 417 patients showed _____. – _____ increased, but _____ decreased. – The average depth was _____. – In all, 93% of the dental students and 77% of the medical students indicated that ______. – The difference in _____ was not statistically significant.

Results Sections of Papers with Tables or Figures • How much should the information

Results Sections of Papers with Tables or Figures • How much should the information in the text overlap that in the tables and figures? – Not extensive overlap – In general, text should present only the main points from the tables and figures – Perhaps also include a few of the most important data • Remember to mention each table or figure. Do so as soon as readers might want to see it.

Mentioning Tables and Figures: Some Writing Advice • In citing tables and figures, emphasize

Mentioning Tables and Figures: Some Writing Advice • In citing tables and figures, emphasize the finding, not the table or figure. – Not so good: Table 3 shows that researchers who attended the workshop published twice as many papers per year. – Better: Researchers who attended the workshop published twice as many papers per year (Table 3).

Tables: A Few Suggestions • Use tables only if text will not suffice. •

Tables: A Few Suggestions • Use tables only if text will not suffice. • Design tables to be understandable without the text. • If a paper includes a series of tables, use the same format for each. • Be sure to follow the instructions to authors.

Figures: A Few Suggestions • Use figures (graphs, diagrams, maps, photographs, etc) only if

Figures: A Few Suggestions • Use figures (graphs, diagrams, maps, photographs, etc) only if they will help convey your information. • Avoid including too much information in one figure. • Make sure that any lettering will be large enough once published. • Follow the journal’s instructions.

Small-Group Exercise: Methods and Results Sections • Note the most important points presented about

Small-Group Exercise: Methods and Results Sections • Note the most important points presented about the methods section and results section. • Note and discuss any questions you may have. • Look at published papers that group members brought. See how they compare with what was said about the methods and results sections. • If you brought a draft of a paper, consider the methods and results sections in light of the lecture material. Consider what you would keep the same and what changes you would make.

Discussion of Small-Group Exercise

Discussion of Small-Group Exercise

The Introduction

The Introduction

Purposes of the Introduction • To provide background – In order to help readers

Purposes of the Introduction • To provide background – In order to help readers understand the paper – In order to help readers appreciate the importance of the research • To identify the question or questions that the research addressed (or the hypothesis or hypotheses that the research tested)

Length of Introduction • Articles in some fields tend to have short introductions (a

Length of Introduction • Articles in some fields tend to have short introductions (a few paragraphs or less) • Articles in some other fields tend to have long introductions or to also include related sections (for example, literature review) • What about introductions in your field?

Gearing the Introduction to the Audience • Papers in relatively general journals: Introduction must

Gearing the Introduction to the Audience • Papers in relatively general journals: Introduction must provide basic background information. • Papers in specialized journals in your field: Introduction can assume that readers have more knowledge about the field.

Structure of the Introduction • Introduction typically should be funnelshaped, moving from general to

Structure of the Introduction • Introduction typically should be funnelshaped, moving from general to specific • A common structure: – Information on importance of topic – Highlights of relevant previous research – Identification of unanswered question(s) – Approach you used to seek the answer(s) – (In some fields) your main findings

Discussion

Discussion

Discussion • One of the more difficult parts to write, because have more choice

Discussion • One of the more difficult parts to write, because have more choice of what to say • Often should begin with a brief summary of the main findings • Should answer the question(s) stated in the introduction (or address the hypothesis or hypotheses) • Sometimes is followed by a conclusions section

The Discussion: Some Possible Content • Strengths of the study – For example, superior

The Discussion: Some Possible Content • Strengths of the study – For example, superior methods, extensive data • Limitations of the study – For example: small sample size, short follow-up, incomplete data, possible sources of bias, problems with experimental procedures – Better to mention limitations than for peer reviewers and readers to think that you’re unaware of them – If the limitations seem unlikely to affect the conclusions, can explain why

The Discussion: Possible Content (cont) • Relationship to findings of other research —for example:

The Discussion: Possible Content (cont) • Relationship to findings of other research —for example: – Similarities to previous findings (your own, others’, or both) – Differences from previous findings – Possible reasons for similarities and differences

The Discussion: Possible Content (cont) • Applications and implications—for example: – Possible uses of

The Discussion: Possible Content (cont) • Applications and implications—for example: – Possible uses of the findings (in clinical practice, in policy, or otherwise) – Relationship of the findings to theories or models: • Do the findings support them? • Do they refute them? • Do they suggest modifications?

The Discussion: Possible Content (cont) • Other research needed—for example: – To address questions

The Discussion: Possible Content (cont) • Other research needed—for example: – To address questions still unanswered – To address new questions raised by the findings • Other

The Discussion: Structure • Typically should move from specific to general (opposite of introduction)

The Discussion: Structure • Typically should move from specific to general (opposite of introduction) • Beware of excessive length

IMRAD Structure: Like an Hourglass • Introduction: starts by talking broadly about your topic

IMRAD Structure: Like an Hourglass • Introduction: starts by talking broadly about your topic and then narrows down to your own research • Methods: narrow—focuses on your research • Results: narrow—focuses on your research • Discussion: starts narrow (with your own research) and then broadens to discuss others’ research and then wider implications

Small-Group Exercise: Introduction and Discussion • Note the most important points presented about the

Small-Group Exercise: Introduction and Discussion • Note the most important points presented about the introduction and discussion. • Note and discuss any questions you may have. • Look at published papers that group members brought. See how they compare with what was said about the introduction and discussion. • If you brought a draft of a paper, consider the introduction and discussion in light of the lecture material. Consider what you would keep the same and what changes you would make.

Discussion of Small-Group Exercise

Discussion of Small-Group Exercise

Acknowledgments • The place to thank people who contributed to the research but whose

Acknowledgments • The place to thank people who contributed to the research but whose contributions don’t qualify them for authorship • Obtain permission before listing people • Sometimes also the place to mention sources of financial support

References

References

Functions of References • To give credit to others for their work • To

Functions of References • To give credit to others for their work • To add credibility to your work by showing that you used valid information sources • To help show your work relates to previous work • To help readers find further information

References: Importance of Accuracy • Studies show that many references are inaccurate. • For

References: Importance of Accuracy • Studies show that many references are inaccurate. • For references to fulfill their functions, they must be accurate. Therefore – Make sure that you accurately state what the cited material says. – Make sure that all information in the citation (for example, author list, article title, journal title, volume, year, pages) is accurate.

Another Reason Your References Should Be Accurate Often, authors whose work you cite will

Another Reason Your References Should Be Accurate Often, authors whose work you cite will be chosen as your peer reviewers. Inaccurate references to their work will not impress them favorably.

Formats • Various formats exist for citation in text—for example: – Accuracy of references

Formats • Various formats exist for citation in text—for example: – Accuracy of references is important (Day and Gastel, 2011). – Accuracy of references is important. 3 • Various formats exist for items in reference lists —for example: – Pineda D. 2003. Communication of science in Colombia. Sci. Ed. 26: 91 -92. – Pineda D. Communication of science in Colombia. Sci Ed 2003; 26: 91 -2.

A Reminder Be sure to use the format used by your target journal. –

A Reminder Be sure to use the format used by your target journal. – For the citations in the text – For the reference list

Citation Management Software • Examples: End. Note, Reference Manager, Ref. Works • Allows you

Citation Management Software • Examples: End. Note, Reference Manager, Ref. Works • Allows you to keep a database of references • Provides the citations and references in the proper format for your target journal

Placement of Citations • Ambiguous: – This disease has been reported in humans, dogs,

Placement of Citations • Ambiguous: – This disease has been reported in humans, dogs, rabbits, and squirrels (Cumming and Gastel, 1997; Khan and Chaudhry, 2008; Zhang, 2002). – This disease has been reported in humans, dogs, rabbits, and squirrels. 1, 4, 7 • Clear: – This disease has been reported in humans (Cumming and Gastel, 1997), dogs (Khan and Chaudhry, 2008), and rabbits and squirrels (Zhang, 2002). – This disease has been reported in humans, 1 dogs, 4 rabbits, 7 and squirrels. 7

Other Advice on References • Cite only items that you have read. • Check

Other Advice on References • Cite only items that you have read. • Check each reference against the original source. • Carefully follow the journal’s instructions to authors. • Use other articles in the same journal as models.

Before Submitting Your Paper • Make sure the abstract is consistent with the rest

Before Submitting Your Paper • Make sure the abstract is consistent with the rest of your paper. • Revise, revise the paper. • Show the paper to other people, and revise it some more. • Re-check the journal’s instructions to authors.

Writing Effectively in English

Writing Effectively in English

The Essentials • The essentials are content, organization, and clarity. • If a paper

The Essentials • The essentials are content, organization, and clarity. • If a paper has excellent content, is well organized, and is clear, it is likely to be accepted even if the English is so-so. • If a paper has poor content, is badly organized, or is unclear, it is likely to be rejected even if the English is excellent.

Cultural Differences to Consider • • Directness of expression? Amount of detail? Attitudes toward

Cultural Differences to Consider • • Directness of expression? Amount of detail? Attitudes toward time? Attitudes toward using material taken from others’ writing? • Other?

Some Common Language Challenges • • • Verb tenses Prepositions Articles Sentence structure Sentence

Some Common Language Challenges • • • Verb tenses Prepositions Articles Sentence structure Sentence length Other • What language challenges, if any, do people in Pakistan face when writing in English?

Some Strategies • Compiling lists of words and phrases commonly used in your field

Some Strategies • Compiling lists of words and phrases commonly used in your field • Writing simply • Having people with a strong command of English review your drafts • Using a professional editor (if possible, one familiar with your field) • Other

Writing Readably • In general, avoid – Very long paragraphs – Very long sentences

Writing Readably • In general, avoid – Very long paragraphs – Very long sentences • Perhaps use – Headings – Bulleted or numbered lists – Italics and boldface (but don’t overuse these) – Easy-to-understand graphics

Writing Readably (cont) • Where feasible, – Use simple, common words. • attempt→ fundamental→

Writing Readably (cont) • Where feasible, – Use simple, common words. • attempt→ fundamental→ – Delete needless words. • red in color→ totally destroyed→ – Condense wordy phrases. • at this point in time→ in the event that→ – Use verbs, not nouns made from them. • produce relief of→ provide an explanation→

Questions? Comments? Additions?

Questions? Comments? Additions?

Learning More: Some Resources

Learning More: Some Resources

Some General Resources • One. Look Dictionary Search (www. onelook. com) • Academic Phrasebank

Some General Resources • One. Look Dictionary Search (www. onelook. com) • Academic Phrasebank (www. phrasebank. manchester. ac. uk) • Grammar Girl (grammar. quickanddirtytips. com) • University writing centers (search online) • Books on scientific writing—for example: – Research Writing in Dentistry, by J. Anthony von Fraunhofer – How to Write and Publish a Scientific Paper, 7 th ed, by Robert A. Day and Barbara Gastel

Author. AID at INASP (www. authoraid. info) • A project mainly to help researchers

Author. AID at INASP (www. authoraid. info) • A project mainly to help researchers in developing countries to write about and publish their work • Main components – Mentoring – Workshops – Openly accessible content – Small travel grants and workshop grants

Questions and Answers

Questions and Answers

Closing Items

Closing Items

Thank you!

Thank you!