Pre- and Post-Course Assignments: Difference between revisions
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* '''''Email:'' | * '''''Email''': Peerspectives Post-Course Assignment'' | ||
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!Peerspectives Post-Course Assignment | |||
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|SUBJECT: Peerspectives Post-Course Assignment | |||
Dear Reviewer, | |||
We are contacting you today with some important instructions and your post-course assessment. | |||
Below this email, you will find a BMJ reviewer invitation email that has been modified for our program. Attached, you will find the article to be peer reviewed and any supplemental information (including any checklists) that were submitted by the authors. | |||
To simulate “real-world” reviewing conditions, we request that you submit your peer reviewer report '''by noon on MM DD YYYY'''. This assignment is mandatory to receive credit for the course, so if you cannot complete it by this date, please let us know. | |||
You can use any resources available to you in order to complete the review. We ask that you do not discuss your review report with other Peerspectives participants. | |||
Please draft your reviewer report using the attached form and send your report to [YOUR EMAIL ADDRESS] on or before the deadline. Forms should be returned as a DOCX or PDF file with the following naming convention: '''Lastname_Firstname_Pre-Assessment.''' | |||
However, do keep in mind that this is a real, submitted manuscript that is currently under review at the BMJ. Therefore, '''you must adhere to the confidentiality agreement''' you signed as a part of the Peerspectives program and not disclose any information about the article to anyone outside of the framework of this assessment. '''Please under no circumstances upload your review online, contact the BMJ directly, or contact any of the authors of your assigned manuscript!''' Also note that your comments submitted for this assessment '''will not''' be sent to the authors, as it is an assessment exercise as part of your training in the course. Once you have completed the assignment, please delete all assessment files. | |||
The course instructors will review your submitted assessment and give you feedback. As with all course assignments, your name will be submitted to them together with the assessment. We therefore encourage you to complete the assignment with your best effort, as if it is a real peer-review assignment. | |||
Do not hesitate to contact us by email if you have any questions related to the course or assessment logistics. Please note, however, that we cannot answer any content-related questions pertaining to the first assessment. | |||
Best wishes, | |||
[YOUR NAME] | |||
The Peerspectives Team | |||
<nowiki>--------------------</nowiki> | |||
YY-MM-YYYY | |||
Dear Reviewer, | |||
Manuscript ID [MANUSCRIPT ID] titled '''"[MANUSCRIPT TITLE]" has been submitted to the BMJ.''' | |||
Thank you for accepting our invitation to review this paper by '''MM DD YYYY.''' | |||
<nowiki>**</nowiki>FULLY OPEN PEER REVIEW FOR RESEARCH** | |||
Please note that The BMJ uses fully open peer review for research papers. This means that authors and - for accepted papers - readers will be able to read all the reviewers’ signed reports | |||
• we expect all reviewers to sign their reviews and declare any relevant competing interests | |||
• we pass all reviewers’ comments to the authors, so please do not make any comments that you do not wish the author to see. Even if we do not accept an article we would like to pass on constructive comments that might help the author to improve it | |||
• if the paper is accepted we will in most cases post its pre-publication history alongside it on thebmj.com. This pre-publication history will comprise reviewers’ comments, previous versions of the manuscript, the study protocol (submitting the protocol is mandatory for all clinical trials and encouraged for all other studies at The BMJ), the report from the manuscript committee meeting, and the authors’ responses to all the comments from reviewers and editors. There are exceptions to this policy. For example, in cases of stigmatised illnesses, we endeavor to allow patient reviewers to remain anonymous. Your signed review will be posted on thebmj.com next to the published paper. | |||
<nowiki>**</nowiki>WRITING A REVIEW** | |||
Our general guidance for peer reviewers is available at <nowiki>http://www.bmj.com/about-bmj/resources-reviewers</nowiki> | |||
We are considering this article as a research article, and we would like your advice on its originality, importance to general medical readers, and scientific reliability. | |||
* Originality - does the work add enough to what is already in the published literature? If so, what does it add? If not, please cite relevant references. | |||
* Importance of work to general readers - does this work matter to clinicians, patients, teachers, or policymakers? Is a general journal the right place for it? | |||
* Scientific reliability | |||
* Research Question - clearly defined and appropriately answered? | |||
* Overall design of study - adequate ? | |||
* Participants studied - adequately described and their conditions defined? | |||
* Methods - adequately described? Complies with relevant reporting standards - Eg CONSORT for randomised trials? Ethical? | |||
* Results - answer the research question? Credible? Well presented? | |||
* Interpretation and conclusions - warranted by and sufficiently derived from/focused on the data? Message clear? | |||
* References - up to date and relevant? Any glaring omissions? | |||
* Abstract/summary/key messages/What this paper adds - reflect accurately what the paper says? | |||
If the paper is a randomised controlled trial, we will have asked the authors to provide the protocol and a CONSORT checklist. Other research designs should have the relevant checklist (PRISMA, STARD etc). These are available by clicking on "Download associated files". | |||
Reviewers advise the editors, who are responsible for the final decision to accept or reject a manuscript. Manuscripts sent for review are usually seen by at least two reviewers, and reviewers can access each other's reports on the same manuscript once The BMJ has made its decision. We hope that this will provide useful feedback and learning. | |||
Finally, we would ask you to keep confidential any information about articles you are reviewing for us. | |||
We would be very grateful for your help with this manuscript. | |||
Thank you for your support. | |||
BMJ Editorial Team | |||
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* '''''Email:''' Peerspectives Post-Course Assignment - Late'' | |||
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!Peerspectives Post-Course Assignment - Late | |||
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|SUBJECT: Peerspectives Post-Course Assignment - Late | |||
Dear Reviewer, | |||
We haven't received your review of manuscript '''02_BMJ-2024-PEERSP-SoSe''' titled “Integrated mental health video consultations model for patients with depression and anxiety in primary care (PROVIDE-C): A prospective, assessor-blind, superiority randomised controlled trial.” We would like to kindly ask you to send us the report as soon as possible to receive credit for this course. | |||
Sincerely, | |||
Claire Dickson-Burke | |||
The Peerspectives Team | |||
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Revision as of 14:21, 26 May 2025
Pre-course Assignment
Rationale
- Gauge the baseline peer review ability of participants
- Baseline ability can be used as a guide to help with assigning the workshop groups
Assignment description
We request four manuscripts from the partner journal that have passed the peer review stage, but have not yet been published from our journal partner. If not working without a journal partner, any published paper or pre-print would also be sufficient. In order to simulate a “real” peer review process, the participants are then asked to write a review for one of the four manuscripts as if they were getting the request directly from the journal. They then have two weeks to complete the review and are able to request an extension if needed.
Related email templates
- Email: Pre-course assignment
Peerspectives Pre-Course Assignment |
---|
SUBJECT: Peerspectives Pre-Course Assigment
Dear Reviewer, We are contacting you today with some important instructions and your pre-course assessment. Below this email, you will find a BMJ reviewer invitation email that has been modified for our program. Attached, you will find the article to be peer reviewed and any supplemental information (including any checklists) that were submitted by the authors. To simulate “real-world” reviewing conditions, we request that you submit your peer reviewer report within 2 weeks time (by noon on DD MM YYYY). You can use any resources available to you in order to complete the review. We ask that you do not discuss your review report with other Peerspectives participants. If you are not able to meet this deadline, we can give you an extension of one additional week, if you request this by email. Please draft your reviewer report using the attached form and send your report to [YOUR EMAIL] on or before the deadline. Forms should be returned as a DOCX or PDF file with the following naming convention: Lastname_Firstname_Pre-Assessment. However, do keep in mind that this is a real, submitted manuscript that is currently under review at the BMJ. Therefore, you must adhere to the confidentiality agreement you signed as a part of the Peerspectives program and not disclose any information about the article to anyone outside of the framework of this assessment. Please under no circumstances upload your review online, contact the BMJ directly, or contact any of the authors of your assigned manuscript! Also note that your comments submitted for this assessment will not be sent to the authors, as it is an assessment exercise as part of your training in the course. Once you have completed the assignment, please delete all assessment files. The course instructors will review your submitted assessment to get an idea of your abilities prior to the start of the course. As with all course assignments, your name will be submitted to them together with the assessment. We therefore encourage you to complete the assignment with your best effort, as if it is a real peer-review assignment. Do not hesitate to contact us by email if you have any questions related to the course or assessment logistics. Please note, however, that we cannot answer any content-related questions pertaining to the first assessment.
Best wishes, [YOUR NAME] Peerspectives Team |
- Email: Pre-course assignment reminder
Peerspectives Pre-Course Assignment: Due in X Days |
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SUBJECT: Peerspectives Pre-Course Assignment: Due in X Days
Dear Reviewer, Recently, you agreed to review manuscript [MANUSCRIPT CODE] titled "[MANUSCRIPT TITLE].” This is a reminder that your review is due in [X] days on MM D YYYY, at 12:00 CEST. *Due to current circumstances we understand that you may need more time than usual to complete your review - please let us know if you need a 1-week extension by replying to this email*.
Sincerely, [YOUR NAME] The Peerspectives Team |
Post-course Assignment
Rationale
- Assess participants' growth from the course
Assignment description
We use the same four manuscripts that were distributed as the pre-course assignment. For the post-course assignment, we recommend that each participant be assigned one of the four pre-course assignments that they have not previously reviewed.
The teaching team provides feedback on the post-course assignment following submission.
Ideally, based on the timeframe of the course, the manuscripts that the participants have reviewed for the pre and post course assignments will be published shortly after the completion of the course. This way the participants will be able to compare their own reviews to the published reviews for the papers (if partnering with an open review journal).
Related email templates
- Email: Peerspectives Post-Course Assignment
Peerspectives Post-Course Assignment |
---|
SUBJECT: Peerspectives Post-Course Assignment
[YOUR NAME] The Peerspectives Team
Please note that The BMJ uses fully open peer review for research papers. This means that authors and - for accepted papers - readers will be able to read all the reviewers’ signed reports
• we pass all reviewers’ comments to the authors, so please do not make any comments that you do not wish the author to see. Even if we do not accept an article we would like to pass on constructive comments that might help the author to improve it • if the paper is accepted we will in most cases post its pre-publication history alongside it on thebmj.com. This pre-publication history will comprise reviewers’ comments, previous versions of the manuscript, the study protocol (submitting the protocol is mandatory for all clinical trials and encouraged for all other studies at The BMJ), the report from the manuscript committee meeting, and the authors’ responses to all the comments from reviewers and editors. There are exceptions to this policy. For example, in cases of stigmatised illnesses, we endeavor to allow patient reviewers to remain anonymous. Your signed review will be posted on thebmj.com next to the published paper.
Our general guidance for peer reviewers is available at http://www.bmj.com/about-bmj/resources-reviewers
Thank you for your support.
|
- Email: Peerspectives Post-Course Assignment - Late
Peerspectives Post-Course Assignment - Late |
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SUBJECT: Peerspectives Post-Course Assignment - Late
Dear Reviewer,
Claire Dickson-Burke The Peerspectives Team |