Chinese Doctors Connecting to the English Publishing World: Literature Access, Editorial Services, and Training in Publication Skills

In the literature on academic publishing, little attention has been paid to the needs and concerns of non-English-speaking researchers in professional contexts. This paper addresses the gap in that literature by providing insights into the situation with medical doctors in China. Following an overvi...

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Main Author: Yongyan Li
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2013-12-01
Series:Publications
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.mdpi.com/2304-6775/2/1/1
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spelling doaj-6ce756121fc440c981a3f69caa93cb622020-11-24T23:16:14ZengMDPI AGPublications2304-67752013-12-012111310.3390/publications2010001publications2010001Chinese Doctors Connecting to the English Publishing World: Literature Access, Editorial Services, and Training in Publication SkillsYongyan Li0Faculty of Education, University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong, ChinaIn the literature on academic publishing, little attention has been paid to the needs and concerns of non-English-speaking researchers in professional contexts. This paper addresses the gap in that literature by providing insights into the situation with medical doctors in China. Following an overview of the broad picture, I will report a case study, which was conducted at a major hospital in East China and which aimed at exploring how a group of orthopedic surgeons access the English medical literature and to what extent they seek the support of editorial services and training in academic writing/publication skills. The results of the study show that the participant doctors tend to rely on their students or overseas personal connections for access to full-text medical literature, and they have generally had limited experience with language editorial services and academic writing/publication skills seminars. The paper ends by discussing some challenges while proposing recommendations for enhancing Chinese doctors’ access to the full-text medical literature, as well as their understanding of the kind of support that can be provided by editorial services and training in publication skills.http://www.mdpi.com/2304-6775/2/1/1Chinese doctorsinternational publicationEnglish-medium full-text medical literatureeditorial servicestraining in publication skills
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Yongyan Li
spellingShingle Yongyan Li
Chinese Doctors Connecting to the English Publishing World: Literature Access, Editorial Services, and Training in Publication Skills
Publications
Chinese doctors
international publication
English-medium full-text medical literature
editorial services
training in publication skills
author_facet Yongyan Li
author_sort Yongyan Li
title Chinese Doctors Connecting to the English Publishing World: Literature Access, Editorial Services, and Training in Publication Skills
title_short Chinese Doctors Connecting to the English Publishing World: Literature Access, Editorial Services, and Training in Publication Skills
title_full Chinese Doctors Connecting to the English Publishing World: Literature Access, Editorial Services, and Training in Publication Skills
title_fullStr Chinese Doctors Connecting to the English Publishing World: Literature Access, Editorial Services, and Training in Publication Skills
title_full_unstemmed Chinese Doctors Connecting to the English Publishing World: Literature Access, Editorial Services, and Training in Publication Skills
title_sort chinese doctors connecting to the english publishing world: literature access, editorial services, and training in publication skills
publisher MDPI AG
series Publications
issn 2304-6775
publishDate 2013-12-01
description In the literature on academic publishing, little attention has been paid to the needs and concerns of non-English-speaking researchers in professional contexts. This paper addresses the gap in that literature by providing insights into the situation with medical doctors in China. Following an overview of the broad picture, I will report a case study, which was conducted at a major hospital in East China and which aimed at exploring how a group of orthopedic surgeons access the English medical literature and to what extent they seek the support of editorial services and training in academic writing/publication skills. The results of the study show that the participant doctors tend to rely on their students or overseas personal connections for access to full-text medical literature, and they have generally had limited experience with language editorial services and academic writing/publication skills seminars. The paper ends by discussing some challenges while proposing recommendations for enhancing Chinese doctors’ access to the full-text medical literature, as well as their understanding of the kind of support that can be provided by editorial services and training in publication skills.
topic Chinese doctors
international publication
English-medium full-text medical literature
editorial services
training in publication skills
url http://www.mdpi.com/2304-6775/2/1/1
work_keys_str_mv AT yongyanli chinesedoctorsconnectingtotheenglishpublishingworldliteratureaccesseditorialservicesandtraininginpublicationskills
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