- My Forums
- Tiger Rant
- LSU Recruiting
- SEC Rant
- Saints Talk
- Pelicans Talk
- More Sports Board
- Fantasy Sports
- Golf Board
- Soccer Board
- O-T Lounge
- Tech Board
- Home/Garden Board
- Outdoor Board
- Health/Fitness Board
- Movie/TV Board
- Book Board
- Music Board
- Political Talk
- Money Talk
- Fark Board
- Gaming Board
- Travel Board
- Food/Drink Board
- Ticket Exchange
- TD Help Board
Customize My Forums- View All Forums
- Show Left Links
- Topic Sort Options
- Trending Topics
- Recent Topics
- Active Topics
Started By
Message
Question about a journal publication on a resume
Posted on 2/6/14 at 5:00 pm
Posted on 2/6/14 at 5:00 pm
I will be an author on a paper due to my work during my most recent internship. The paper is not yet published and currently in the process of doing so.
On my last day, my boss told me that she has seen people add authorship of a paper on their resume as being in the process of publication. Should I do this or wait until it is officially published in a journal?
On my last day, my boss told me that she has seen people add authorship of a paper on their resume as being in the process of publication. Should I do this or wait until it is officially published in a journal?
Posted on 2/6/14 at 5:02 pm to Seven Costanza
This is ok. Just put the title of the article with authors along with the journal name. Then just put in parentheses after it that it is yet to be published.
Posted on 2/6/14 at 5:05 pm to Seven Costanza
It's fine. Put something like, accepted, not yet published.
Posted on 2/6/14 at 5:08 pm to Seven Costanza
List the authors, title, journal, year, and also the page numbers, volume, etc. if you know that. Then in italics at the end, you can either put "In press" or "Submitted", depending on where the paper is at in the publication process.
Posted on 2/6/14 at 5:09 pm to Seven Costanza
congrats on publication. that's pretty cool
Posted on 2/6/14 at 5:10 pm to TBsoccer13
So if it isn't yet accepted, just put the journal that it was submitted to and state that it has only been submitted?
I am having a hard time deciding how to format that.
I am having a hard time deciding how to format that.
Posted on 2/6/14 at 5:15 pm to Seven Costanza
I think the norm is that you would only include a publication if it's been at least been accepted. So if it's been accepted, but not yet published, you include "In press" at the end of the citation.
But if you want it to be on your resume before it's accepted, you can put that it's Submitted.
But if you want it to be on your resume before it's accepted, you can put that it's Submitted.
Posted on 2/6/14 at 5:17 pm to Seven Costanza
I'd just put that shite as if it's already published... unless you're trying to get a journalism/etc job, there is a much less likely chance of them looking into it.
I'd roll the dice.
I'd roll the dice.
Posted on 2/6/14 at 5:22 pm to TH03
quote:
congrats on publication. that's pretty cool
Thanks
It's something I've always wanted to do but didn't think I would get a chance to.
quote:
But if you want it to be on your resume before it's accepted, you can put that it's Submitted.
I guess I'll go with this. I'm tempted to do what the guy above me said and just add it as if it has already been accepted.
This post was edited on 2/6/14 at 5:24 pm
Posted on 2/6/14 at 5:33 pm to Seven Costanza
If it's been accepted to the journal put (In Press) or (In Publication) after the name of the journal in the citation. That's what I do and what everybody else I know does.
Posted on 2/6/14 at 5:34 pm to Seven Costanza
What's your area of study?
Posted on 2/6/14 at 5:50 pm to TheIndulger
quote:
What's your area of study?
Biomedical Engineering
The types of jobs that I will be applying to won't have me involved with publishing papers in the future, but I thought it would look good on my resume.
Popular
Back to top
Follow TigerDroppings for LSU Football News