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How should I state my peer review experience in the CV?
How much can you share unpublished forum articles?Accomplished researchers listed as editors of shady journalShould editors and reviewers be listed alongside authors, to give them credit?Should I contact the editor-in-chief about a senior editor's lack of communication?How to find double blind peer review journals in physics?Peer-review in ‘fully peer-review journals’Peer-Review dispatch by ProfessorShould graduate students peer-review papers?What should I do if someone submit a review of a manuscript in journal system sooner than I know and I already prepared a detailed review?Why did the editor give my peer review to another peer reviewer before their review was written?
I've been invited to review manuscripts for 2 journals in my field frequently. I noticed in the first couple of cases my supervisor was the Associate Editor which has selected me in the process, but for rest of them, I was assigned to the papers by other Editors (not from our network).
So, I assumed that my name should be there somewhere in a list, such that the editors may choose me when they see a paper matches my keywords or my previous review results, etc.
Now, I want to state that in my CV and in a list separate from my Ad-Hoc review experiences, but I do not know what suitable key phrase I should use.
Can I use for instance, "member of the review board" for journals X and Y?
By the way, I work in the field of computer science.
peer-review journals cv
add a comment |
I've been invited to review manuscripts for 2 journals in my field frequently. I noticed in the first couple of cases my supervisor was the Associate Editor which has selected me in the process, but for rest of them, I was assigned to the papers by other Editors (not from our network).
So, I assumed that my name should be there somewhere in a list, such that the editors may choose me when they see a paper matches my keywords or my previous review results, etc.
Now, I want to state that in my CV and in a list separate from my Ad-Hoc review experiences, but I do not know what suitable key phrase I should use.
Can I use for instance, "member of the review board" for journals X and Y?
By the way, I work in the field of computer science.
peer-review journals cv
add a comment |
I've been invited to review manuscripts for 2 journals in my field frequently. I noticed in the first couple of cases my supervisor was the Associate Editor which has selected me in the process, but for rest of them, I was assigned to the papers by other Editors (not from our network).
So, I assumed that my name should be there somewhere in a list, such that the editors may choose me when they see a paper matches my keywords or my previous review results, etc.
Now, I want to state that in my CV and in a list separate from my Ad-Hoc review experiences, but I do not know what suitable key phrase I should use.
Can I use for instance, "member of the review board" for journals X and Y?
By the way, I work in the field of computer science.
peer-review journals cv
I've been invited to review manuscripts for 2 journals in my field frequently. I noticed in the first couple of cases my supervisor was the Associate Editor which has selected me in the process, but for rest of them, I was assigned to the papers by other Editors (not from our network).
So, I assumed that my name should be there somewhere in a list, such that the editors may choose me when they see a paper matches my keywords or my previous review results, etc.
Now, I want to state that in my CV and in a list separate from my Ad-Hoc review experiences, but I do not know what suitable key phrase I should use.
Can I use for instance, "member of the review board" for journals X and Y?
By the way, I work in the field of computer science.
peer-review journals cv
peer-review journals cv
edited 4 hours ago
Babak
asked 5 hours ago
BabakBabak
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2 Answers
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This is the sort of thing which will vary more from field to field, and you may want to talk to other people in your field, but my general inclination is not to do so. Unless you have been specifically told that there is some review board you are on, or been invited to be on, this may not even exist. Aside from the ethics, if this is a prominent journal, and one of the editors sees your CV, they could react extremely negatively. A better solution might be that if you are going to list what journals you have reviewed for is to list how many articles you have reviewed for a journal if you have reviewed more than one.
3
It is probably enough to just say "a reviewer for ACM SigPlan" or whatever.
– Buffy
2 hours ago
add a comment |
Can I use for instance, "member of the review board" for journals X and Y?
I agree with Joshua, it's a bit risky to present it this way unless you are sure that this journal has something that they call "review board" and that you are on it (it might not exist or have a different name). Personally I just have a section called "Reviewing activities" with a list of journals/conferences I reviewed for ordered by year.
add a comment |
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2 Answers
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active
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2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
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active
oldest
votes
This is the sort of thing which will vary more from field to field, and you may want to talk to other people in your field, but my general inclination is not to do so. Unless you have been specifically told that there is some review board you are on, or been invited to be on, this may not even exist. Aside from the ethics, if this is a prominent journal, and one of the editors sees your CV, they could react extremely negatively. A better solution might be that if you are going to list what journals you have reviewed for is to list how many articles you have reviewed for a journal if you have reviewed more than one.
3
It is probably enough to just say "a reviewer for ACM SigPlan" or whatever.
– Buffy
2 hours ago
add a comment |
This is the sort of thing which will vary more from field to field, and you may want to talk to other people in your field, but my general inclination is not to do so. Unless you have been specifically told that there is some review board you are on, or been invited to be on, this may not even exist. Aside from the ethics, if this is a prominent journal, and one of the editors sees your CV, they could react extremely negatively. A better solution might be that if you are going to list what journals you have reviewed for is to list how many articles you have reviewed for a journal if you have reviewed more than one.
3
It is probably enough to just say "a reviewer for ACM SigPlan" or whatever.
– Buffy
2 hours ago
add a comment |
This is the sort of thing which will vary more from field to field, and you may want to talk to other people in your field, but my general inclination is not to do so. Unless you have been specifically told that there is some review board you are on, or been invited to be on, this may not even exist. Aside from the ethics, if this is a prominent journal, and one of the editors sees your CV, they could react extremely negatively. A better solution might be that if you are going to list what journals you have reviewed for is to list how many articles you have reviewed for a journal if you have reviewed more than one.
This is the sort of thing which will vary more from field to field, and you may want to talk to other people in your field, but my general inclination is not to do so. Unless you have been specifically told that there is some review board you are on, or been invited to be on, this may not even exist. Aside from the ethics, if this is a prominent journal, and one of the editors sees your CV, they could react extremely negatively. A better solution might be that if you are going to list what journals you have reviewed for is to list how many articles you have reviewed for a journal if you have reviewed more than one.
answered 4 hours ago
JoshuaZJoshuaZ
2,374714
2,374714
3
It is probably enough to just say "a reviewer for ACM SigPlan" or whatever.
– Buffy
2 hours ago
add a comment |
3
It is probably enough to just say "a reviewer for ACM SigPlan" or whatever.
– Buffy
2 hours ago
3
3
It is probably enough to just say "a reviewer for ACM SigPlan" or whatever.
– Buffy
2 hours ago
It is probably enough to just say "a reviewer for ACM SigPlan" or whatever.
– Buffy
2 hours ago
add a comment |
Can I use for instance, "member of the review board" for journals X and Y?
I agree with Joshua, it's a bit risky to present it this way unless you are sure that this journal has something that they call "review board" and that you are on it (it might not exist or have a different name). Personally I just have a section called "Reviewing activities" with a list of journals/conferences I reviewed for ordered by year.
add a comment |
Can I use for instance, "member of the review board" for journals X and Y?
I agree with Joshua, it's a bit risky to present it this way unless you are sure that this journal has something that they call "review board" and that you are on it (it might not exist or have a different name). Personally I just have a section called "Reviewing activities" with a list of journals/conferences I reviewed for ordered by year.
add a comment |
Can I use for instance, "member of the review board" for journals X and Y?
I agree with Joshua, it's a bit risky to present it this way unless you are sure that this journal has something that they call "review board" and that you are on it (it might not exist or have a different name). Personally I just have a section called "Reviewing activities" with a list of journals/conferences I reviewed for ordered by year.
Can I use for instance, "member of the review board" for journals X and Y?
I agree with Joshua, it's a bit risky to present it this way unless you are sure that this journal has something that they call "review board" and that you are on it (it might not exist or have a different name). Personally I just have a section called "Reviewing activities" with a list of journals/conferences I reviewed for ordered by year.
answered 2 hours ago
ErwanErwan
3,185914
3,185914
add a comment |
add a comment |
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