English, asked by apexstud, 9 months ago

Which question would you ask your peer reviewers to check if more details are needed?

Which ideas seemed unrelated to my main idea?

How would you summarize my main idea?

Did the lead entice you to read more?

What do you want to know more about?

Answers

Answered by snowme
1

Answer:

Explanation:

1. Do you have a conflict of interest when reviewing this paper? Do you collaborate with these authors, are they your personal friends, or are they direct competitors? Have you reviewed (and rejected) this paper before? If so, you need to let the editors know.

2. Do the title and abstract cover the main aspects of the work, would it spark interest to the right audience?

3. Is the Introduction easy to follow for most readers of this particular journal? Does it cite the appropriate papers? Does it provide a hypothesis or aim of the study?

4. Does the Methods section provide enough details for the general reader to repeat the experiments?

The main point here, then, is that I am not arguing against judgment or evaluation. ... a piece of writing: • The thinking and ideas seemed interesting and creative. ... of voice that seems unrelated or inappropriate to what the writer was saying.

A summary begins with an introductory sentence that states the text's title, author and main point of the text as you see it. A summary is written in your own words. A summary contains only the ideas of the original text. Do not insert anHow do you get people to read more?

Here are some tricks I use to read more:

Carry your book(s) everywhere. There's always an opportunity to read. ...

Keep a list. There's a sense of fulfillment and motivation tracking the books you've read. ...

Read multiple books. ...

Mark it up. ...

Share what you read. .Humans are curious species, we like to know or more appropriately we want to know everything about everyone because we are not satisfied and happy with our lives so we LOVE to interfere with other people's lives. We want to know what other people are doing and then criticise them...

Listen y of your own opinions, interpretations, deductions or comments into a summary.

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