Abstract
Peer review is a mainstay of academic publication indeed, it is
the peer-review process that provides much of the publications
credibility. As the number of computing education conferences
and the number of submissions increase, the need for reviewers
grows. This report does not attempt to set standards for reviewing;
rather, as a first step toward meeting the need for well qualified
reviewers, it presents an overview of the ways peer review is used
in various venues, both inside computing education and, for comparison, in closely-related areas outside our field. It considers four
key components of peer review in some depth: criteria, the review
process, roles and responsibilities, and ethics and etiquette. To do
so, it draws on relevant literature, guidance and forms associated
with peer review, interviews with journal editors and conference
chairs, and a limited survey of the computing education research
community. In addition to providing an overview of practice, this
report identifies a number of themes running through the discourse
that have relevance for decision making about how best to conduct
peer review for a given venue.
Original language | English (Ireland) |
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DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 1 Jun 2020 |
Authors (Note for portal: view the doc link for the full list of authors)
- Authors
- Petre, M., Sanders, K.; McCartney, R.; Ahmadzadeh, M.; Connolly, C.; Hamouda, S.; Harrington, B.; Lumbroso, J,; Maguire, J.; Malmi, L.; McGill, M. and Vahrenhold, J.