Title: Adopted by the MedEdPORTAL Editorial Board
1Reviewer Tutorial A self-guided tutorial
designed to help MedEdPORTAL reviewers develop
outstanding reviews
- Adopted by the MedEdPORTAL Editorial Board
- Association of American Medical Colleges
- www.aamc.org/mededportal
- Last Updated 5/20/08
2Purpose of Tutorial
- This PowerPoint is a self-guided tutorial that
explains the new MedEdPORTAL peer review form and
the associated peer review process. - Simply read each of the following slides in
sequence it should take no more than 5 10
minutes of your time. - Feel free to use this as a reference in the
future.
3MedEdPORTAL Peer Review
- MedEdPORTAL reviewers ensure that submitted
resources are accurate, clear, complete and
relevant. - The MedEdPORTAL peer review process
- Is comparable to the traditional journal approach
to peer review. - Is anonymous and confidential (reviewer names are
not revealed). - Accepts/rejects submissions based on the
scholarly merit of the submission. - Relies on the proprietary Rapid Review peer
review management system.
Reviewers have 3 weeks to perform a review.
4Conflict of Interest
- Reviewers must disclose to the editor whether any
conflicts of interest exist that could bias their
opinion they should recuse themselves from
reviewing materials in such cases. Simply knowing
one of the authors or having casual knowledge of
the submitted resource does not necessarily mean
that a conflict of interest exists. Conflicts of
interest may include but are not limited to - Any situation where a reviewer could gain
personally or financially as a result of
reviewing the authors submission. - Knowledge of a similar submission under review in
the same or another publication outlet. - A close collaboration or competition with one of
the authors. - Reviewing a submission that would benefit a
particular product, program, or resource that is
related to the reviewer. - Any situation that could limit an objective
review of any submission.
Please keep your review confidential
5Role of the Reviewer
- After considering all components of a submission,
reviewers have two important duties - To Provide Feedback- reviewers provide thoughtful
analysis and feedback to the editor and the
author. - To Decide - reviewers issue a carefully
considered publication recommendation to the
editor. - While we do not ask reviewers to catch
grammatical mistakes, we do rely on reviewers to
detect content that is inaccurate, obsolete, and
irrelevant please do not assume others will
catch such errors.
6Step I Fully Review All Submitted Resources
- Fully and carefully review all submitted
materials. This includes all submitted files or
in the case of a web site, all web site pages. - Be sure to read the author-supplied information
in the Submission Form (in Rapid Review, click
the Adobe Acrobat icon to the left of the
submission title). - The submission form includes important
information regarding - Educational objectives
- Target audience
- Critical reflection
- Evidence of effectiveness
7Step II Answer the Questions on the Peer Review
Form
- The Yes/No questions on the review form were
derived from commonly accepted criteria for
scholarship. - Selecting a NO response for any of these
questions does not necessarily mean the
submission will be rejected. - Please describe the rationale for all NO
responses in the narrative feedback section. - The following two slides offer additional
explanation for each of the questions.
For more information refer to the book
Scholarship Assessed by Dr. Charles Glassick
8Selected Review Form Questions (1 of 2)
- Does the author provide educational objectives
which are both clear and relevant? - Are the objectives clear, realistic, and
achievable? - Are the objectives appropriate for the intended
learner audience? - Is the educational approach or method appropriate
for the stated objectives? - Is the educational approach reasonable for the
stated objectives and learners? - Is it clear how all the component resources
should be used? - Is the content of the submission sufficiently
accurate, clear, and usable? - Are any of the component resources inaccurate,
ambiguous, or unusable? - Are there multimedia quality problems or
technical problems?
Be sure to describe any NO responses to these
questions in the narrative feedback section
9Selected Review Form Questions (2 of 2)
- Does the author reference and/or build upon
related work in this area? - Does the author demonstrate current knowledge of
subject matter? - Does the author reference the related work of
others? - Did the author provide evidence of the relative
value or impact of this submission for the
intended audience? - Does the author provide evidence of the value or
impact that the submission had on the intended
learner audience? - Did the author offer critically reflective
comments regarding this resource? - Does the author provide critical reflection
comments on what worked, what did not work,
and/or what they learned?
Be sure to describe any NO responses to these
questions in the narrative feedback section
10Step III Provide Narrative Feedback
- The narrative feedback is the most important part
of the review process and will be shared with the
author and the editor. Please include the
following - Briefly summarize the nature of the submission
(typically 2 - 3 sentences) - Discuss the strengths and weaknesses (typically
2 or more paragraphs) - List specific revisions, if applicable
- Describe any NO responses to the questions on the
review form - Summary comments and rationale for decision
(typically 1 or more paragraphs) - Answer the following question What has the
author accomplished? - Provide a compelling case for your recommendation
Be sure to reference specifics whenever possible
11Selecting a Publication Recommendation
- Select one of the following publication
recommendations - Accept accept the submission as is. You may
still offer suggestions that would improve the
resource. - Accept with Revisions The submitted material is
accepted for publication, pending receipt of
satisfactory revisions. - Reject the submission, even with revisions,
offers little or no scholarly value.
Keep in mind that revisions to certain kinds of
resources (e.g., software programs, videos) may
require substantial (and sometimes
cost-prohibitive) effort consider whether or not
the revision is critical. Undisputed biomedical
issues should always be revised.
12Dos and Donts of Reviewing
- Do
- Read through all submitted documents.
- Provide feedback that is specific, honest and
courteous. - Proofread your comments.
- Do not
- Provide only a few sentences of feedback.
- Recommend to Accept with Revisions unless you
provide a list of required revisions.
13Thank You for Serving as a Reviewer!
Questions? Email peerreview_at_aamc.org
14(No Transcript)