The impact of COVID-19 on publishing and reviewing in the Journal of Geoscience Education community

Q1 Social Sciences
Alison Jolley, K. Ryker, K. Kortz, E. Riggs
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Abstract COVID-19 has created challenges and opportunities across higher education, with flow-on effects for teaching, research, and publishing. Using an archival case study approach, we analyzed 543 Journal of Geoscience Education submissions from 2018 to 2020 to determine potential impacts of the pandemic on our authors and reviewers. Trends in submission numbers and types, gender, and institutional affiliation were characterized pre- and post-COVID onset. Results indicate that though there was an initial drop in submissions post-COVID onset, submission numbers rose to typical levels a few months later. However, the proportion of Curriculum and Instruction submissions dropped by 10% post-COVID onset, whereas research submissions increased by 12.6%, representing a tenfold increase in the gap between the two. In contrast to other studies that found a decrease in submissions by women authors post-COVID onset, JGE had a 3.8% increase in initial submissions by women corresponding authors. However, there was a 12.2% decrease in revisions by women corresponding authors post-COVID onset. Women reviewers had a 2.2% lower acceptance rate post-COVID onset, though still make up over half of JGE’s reviewers. Although there were more contributions from corresponding authors at research intensive institutions, reviewers from these institutions had lower acceptance rates post-COVID onset. Review and revision durations both increased post-COVID onset, and reviewer decline reasons became more specific. In response to these findings, we recommend that the geoscience education community continue to be openly understanding of work-life balance, encourage more Curriculum & Instruction scholarship, and support more contributions from authors and reviewers at non-research intensive institutions.
2019冠状病毒病对《地球科学教育界杂志》发表和评审的影响
COVID-19给高等教育带来了挑战和机遇,对教学、研究和出版产生了连锁效应。使用档案案例研究方法,我们分析了2018年至2020年《地球科学教育杂志》提交的543份报告,以确定疫情对作者和审稿人的潜在影响。在提交数量和类型、性别和机构隶属关系方面的趋势在发病前和发病后呈现出特征。结果表明,虽然新冠肺炎发病后提交的论文数量最初有所下降,但几个月后提交的论文数量上升到正常水平。然而,在新冠肺炎疫情发生后,课程和教学提交的比例下降了10%,而研究提交的比例增加了12.6%,两者之间的差距增加了10倍。与其他发现女性作者在covid发病后提交的论文减少的研究相反,JGE的女性通讯作者的初始提交增加了3.8%。然而,女性通讯作者在covid - 19发病后的修订率下降了12.2%。女性审稿人在covid - 19发病后的接受率降低了2.2%,但仍占JGE审稿人的一半以上。虽然研究密集型机构的通讯作者贡献更多,但这些机构的审稿人在发病后的接受率较低。审查和修订持续时间在covid发病后都增加了,审稿人拒绝的原因变得更加具体。针对这些发现,我们建议地球科学教育界继续开放地理解工作与生活的平衡,鼓励更多的课程与教学奖学金,并支持来自非研究密集型机构的作者和审稿人的更多贡献。
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来源期刊
Journal of Geoscience Education
Journal of Geoscience Education Social Sciences-Education
CiteScore
3.20
自引率
0.00%
发文量
32
期刊介绍: The Journal of Geoscience Education (JGE) is a peer-reviewed publication for geoscience education research, and serves as an international forum for research concerning the pedagogy, assessment, and philosophy of teaching and learning about the geosciences and related domains. JGE is a publication of the National Association of Geoscience Teachers, a non-profit, member-driven organization that supports a diverse, inclusive, and thriving community of educators and education researchers to improve teaching and learning about the Earth.
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