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Scholarship Resources and Opportunities
Research, Publication, and Presentation Guides
Before you decide where to publish your work, there are several factors to consider, including:
- Manuscript Preparation: Do not rush to submit your manuscript just to check off a box. Instead, take time to prepare your manuscript well and ensure you cover all elements based on your field of study. As you write, remember to set aside your completed work for a couple of days to “simmer”, and then come back to it. This will help you catch obvious mistakes that you might have overlooked while in the thick of writing.
- Identify an Appropriate Journal: Do due diligence to identify and select an appropriate journal or publication that fits your manuscript. Once you have found the journal, take time to read their requirements, including manuscript publication style, manuscript length, turn-around time between initial submission, reviews, and revisions, as needed, and final publication. Review also the acceptance rates, bearing in mind that publishing in certain journals is very competitive, especially the top-tiered journals in your field. Aim for a journal that is likely to publish your work. As you gain more experience in publishing, you can then attempt to submit articles to top-tiered journals. To say this does not mean you cannot submit your work to a top-tiered journal if you believe you have a great manuscript that meets the requirements of the journal. Note that you can only submit your manuscript to one journal at a time. You cannot submit the same manuscript to multiple journals because of potential copyright issues. Most journals, if not all, will ask you to declare whether your manuscript has been submitted or published elsewhere.
- Title and Abstract Matter: It is critical that you choose a title that encompasses the essence of your manuscript. The title and an abstract are akin to the cover of a book that potential readers glance over to determine whether they read the book or put it down and move to the next option. Make sure that your abstract addresses the key points of your article and captures the significance of your work.
- Professional Editing: Have someone edit your work before submission to the journal for review. This will help ensure that your manuscript is not rejected because of poor writing and/or language. A poorly written manuscript will not attract the attention of any journal editor. It is not surprising that a sizeable number of manuscripts are rejected even before they get to reviewers because of poor writing. Take time to properly edit and present your work in a professional manner and to the specifications of the respective journal. This will increase the odds of being published.
- Reviewers Feedback: It is highly likely that you will receive feedback from reviewers. When you do, address all feedback accordingly. We recommend that you create a table that shows the feedback provided in one column, and in the next column add information that explains how the feedback was addressed. Send this table back to the editor with the revised manuscript.
See the following for some insights into publishing:
Knight, L. V., & Steinbach, T. A. (2008). , International Journal of Doctoral Studies.
Sun, H., & Linton, J. D. (2014). , Technovation.
To prepare for your next conference, consider the following as early as you can:
- Conference Identification: Find the specific conference that interests you as a presenter. You can start by looking at professional organizations to which you belong to see what opportunities they have for presenting. You may also check other relevant sites related to your field for conference schedules so you can plan accordingly.
- Call for Proposals: Once you find the conference or session of interest, check the call for proposals deadlines. Normally deadlines are several months before the conference and in some instances almost a year out. Mark the date and work backward to prepare your proposal. For example, if the deadline is February 28 of the next year, you need to start working on your proposal as early as six to twelve months ahead of time. This way, you have ample time to complete your proposal and do all necessary edits rather than work on a rushed timeline when you wait until is it too close to the deadline. Do not procrastinate; keep working on your proposal bit by bit. With this arrangement, you can have more than one proposal going at the same time.
- Presenters' Instructions: Make sure that you follow directions, instructions, and requirements issued in the call for proposals. Do not do what is not asked of you in the proposal guidelines or rubric, if applicable. Doing what is outside of the guidelines is a recipe for rejection. Most reviewers follow guidelines provided by conference organizers in assessing your proposal for presentation and inclusion in the proceedings of the conference.
- Conference Tracks: Look at the tracks provided for the conference and make sure your proposal fits within at least one of the tracks unless otherwise stated in the call for proposals.
While collaborating with peers is critical, finding the right peers to work with on rigorous scholarship projects can be daunting. This often leaves scholars and faculty working alone on projects, forgoing the power of team efforts. To help you navigate through the challenges of collaborating with other researchers and finding a good fit, ensure that you consider the personal characteristics of potential working partners, the team environment where collaboration will take place, and the desired results. See the diagram taken from Gardner, Barcza-Renner, Bowen & Chongwony (2020).

Adapted from Gardner, Barcza-Renner, Bowen & Chongwony (2020): The personal characteristics, group environment, and results that characterized the intellectual community of practice.
It is critical that you work with peers who are as focused and committed to the task as you are. These individuals should be open-minded and trustworthy colleagues with whom you can share your ideas without concern that they will use your ideas for themselves. You also want peers who are humble and who, despite their accomplishments, can be relied upon to provide you with needed support. The team environment should be safe for members to express their thoughts and ideas freely. It should also be structured to ensure that there is some order in your collaboration as well as positivity to keep members going even when they feel like giving up. Within your team environment, you should institute a means of holding each other accountable and responsible for what is agreed upon, whether be it milestones, ground rules, or deliverables.
For more details, see: Gardner, J., Barcza-Renner, K., Bowen, A., & Chongwony, L. (2020). . Journal of Scholarly Publishing, 51(2), 144-154.
app Scholarly Exchange (FUSE)
The is an open access, digital collection of scholarship and research works produced by faculty, staff, and students affiliated with app. We include scholarly and academic work that meets FUSE and .
Continue reading below for additional details; click on links to our for more information; and/or contact FUSE@franklin.edu with any questions.
What can I submit / make available in FUSE?
- Not all works can be made available in FUSE. Whether your work can be posted in FUSE depends on the agreement you had with the publisher of the work.
- Sometimes, even though the published version can’t be made available in FUSE, the publisher will let you post an earlier version.
- Even if your agreement prevents you from providing a PDF of your work in FUSE, we can post an “abstract only” version of your work which links out to the copy of your work on the publisher’s website.
Click on this link to learn more about the types of works you can submit to FUSE:
There are many benefits to submitting your work to FUSE, including:
- Increased visibility of your work. Because FUSE is open access, your work is available to a wide range of scholars. Additionally, FUSE uses Search Engine Optimization (SEO) features to increase discoverability of your work.
- Better data on your research impact. FUSE has an author dashboard that provides you with information on citations and downloads of your work across the world, including a readership map. You can also get regular email updates on your readership from FUSE.
- Obtaining a persistent URL. FUSE provides your work with a persistent URL to ensure stable access to your work now and in the future.
- Promoting Franklin scholarship. FUSE allows us to showcase the great and varied intellectual output of the University community and share that with a global community of learners.
Distinguished Student Scholarship Collection (DSSC)
The app library recognizes exceptional student coursework in the Distinguished Student Scholarship Collection (DSSC). These works are available in app’s digital institutional repository, .
Faculty can nominate works from undergraduate, graduate, and doctoral students (doctoral student work must be non-dissertation related) enrolled during the term. To avoid issues with future assignments, only completed works that do not reflect an assigned topic and will not be repeated in future course instances should be submitted. All submissions must be in PDF or Word format.
Examples of acceptable works include:
- Research papers
- Projects
- Posters
NOTE: Papers, projects, or posters must be original work done within the scope of a student’s coursework. Students should select their topic for the work rather than respond to an assigned topic.
If a student in one of your courses submits work that meets these criteria, . If you have questions about the DSSC, contact the library.
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