Research is only half the work; the other half is writing and publishing. Your research is incomplete until you publish your data.[1] Publishing is necessary but insufficient: others must cite your work.[2] Writing well and preparing a coherent story will help your paper get past the first hurdle in the publishing process -the copy editor. The second hurdle is the editor, who checks if it is suitable for the journal, and reviews the abstract, conclusions, and references.[3] The final hurdle is the reviewers, who devote more time to validate the hypotheses, results, and interpretation. Rejection rates across journals are increasing.[4] Science copy editors send one out of five submissions to the editors, and their overall rejection rate is 93%. The Canadian Journal of Chemical Engineering rejects close to 3 out of 4 papers researchers submit. Write better so journals accept your papers and researchers cite them.
CITATION STYLE
Patience, G. S., Boffito, D. C., & Patience, P. A. (2015). How do you write and present research well? Canadian Journal of Chemical Engineering, 93(10), 1693–1696. https://doi.org/10.1002/cjce.22261
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.