The Detour: Tales They Didn’t Tell You About Journal Publishing
作  者╱
Kuo-Wei Lai、Yeu-Ting Liu、Sonya Fan
出版社別╱
五南
出版日期╱
2025/11/04   (1版 1刷)
  
即日起五南舊官網僅提供書籍查詢,如欲購書,請至五南新官網 https://www.wunan.com.tw/
I  S  B  N ╱
978-626-423-720-8
書  號╱
1H1V
頁  數╱
240
開  數╱
20K
定  價╱
500

※主編簡介
Mei-Huei Liu、Yeu-Ting Liu
Editor
Dr. Mei-Huei Liu
A distinguished professor and provost of National Taiwan Normal University, Dr. Liu works in many areas such as citizenship education, phenomenon-based learning, curriculum development, international education, multicultural education, teacher education, and gender issues.

EditorㆍAuthor
Dr. Yeu-Ting Liu
Yeu-Ting Liu, Ed.D. is Dean of the School of Teacher Education and Distinguished Professor in the Department of English at National Taiwan Normal University. Trained at Teachers College, Columbia University, his research bridges psycholinguistics and second language acquisition, with a focus on how cognitive traits and multimodal cues shape L2 learning. He has published extensively in SSCI-indexed journals, served as an editor and reviewer for leading publications, and led numerous national research projects in Taiwan.

Author
Dr. Kuo-Wei Lai
An academic researcher with a Ph.D. in TESOL from the Department of English at National Taiwan Normal University, Dr. Lai's research interests include computer-assisted language learning (CALL),digital game-based learning, and second-language vocabulary acquisition.

EditorㆍAuthor
Dr. Yeu-Ting Liu
Yeu-Ting Liu, Ed.D. is Dean of the School of Teacher Education and Distinguished Professor in the Department of English at National Taiwan Normal University. Trained at Teachers College, Columbia University, his research bridges psycholinguistics and second language acquisition, with a focus on how cognitive traits and multimodal cues shape L2 learning. He has published extensively in SSCI-indexed journals, served as an editor and reviewer for leading publications, and led numerous national research projects in Taiwan.

Author
Dr. Sonya Fan
A full-time teacher at the Center for Academic Literacy and associate executive at the Resource Center for English as a Medium of Instruction at National Taiwan Normal University, Dr. Fan is active in teacher education, with research interests in international education and bilingual education.

Preface:Writing a Paper? Or Starring in an Academic Drama?

Prologue 1 The Academic Rollercoaster
Episode 1: The Friendly Interview
Episode 2: The Brutal Interview
Episode 3: The Honest Interview
Final Call to Action: What You Need to Remember

Prologue 2 Pressure Makes Scholars
Episode 1: Opportunities Come to Those Who Take Initiative
Episode 2: Thrown Into the Deep End
Episode 3: When Pressure Turns into Preparation
Final Call to Action: What You Need to Remember

Chapter 1 From Conference Hero to Journal Zero
Episode 1: Conference Glory
Episode 2: Confronting Reality (Advisor’s Feedback)
Episode 3: Learning the Hard Way
Final Call to Action: What You Need to Remember

Chapter 2 The Literature Review That Ate My Soul
Episode 1: The Lit Reaper Rises
Episode 2: The Secret Scrolls of Professor Metta
Episode 3: Organized Chaos
Final Call to Action: What You Need to Remember

Chapter 3 Journal Matchmaking: Love at First ‘Cite’?
Episode 1: Hacks for Selecting Journals and… Finding Dates?
Episode 2: Red Flags and Research Frauds
Episode 3: Speed Dates and Submission Waits
Final Call to Action: What You Need to Remember

Chapter 4 Dear Editor, Please Love My Paper(and Don’t Desk Reject It)
Episode 1: The First Level Boss Fight
Episode 2: Sell Me This Research
Episode 3: Finding Your Academic Voice(and Achieving Inner Peace)
Final Call to Action: What You Need to Remember

Chapter 5 Ethics, Etiquette, and the Academic Hunger Games
Episode 1: The Return of the Math Hero
Episode 2: The Phantom of the Author
Episode 3: Spam, Scams, and Saving Sam
Final Call to Action: What You Need to Remember

Chapter 6 Congratulations! Your Paper Is Not Accepted (Yet)
Episode 1: Revise, Resubmit, and Run Away
Episode 2: With Great Power Comes Great Rewriting
Episode 3: Thank You for Lunch—Thank You for Your Comments
Final Call to Action: What You Need to Remember

Chapter 7 When Reviewers Don’t Agree…And You’re Stuck in the Middle
Episode 1: Caught Between a Rock and a Reviewer
Episode 2: Metta the Grey
Episode 3: Professors! Assemble!
Final Call to Action: What You Need to Remember

Chapter 8 So You Want to Be a Reviewer? Welcome to the Dark Side
Episode 1: Look, I’m Your Reviewer
Episode 2: A New Scope
Episode 3: The Reviewer Rises
Final Call to Action: What You Need to Remember

Chapter 9 If They Can’t Find It, They Can’t Cite It
Episode 1: Titles That Bite
Episode 2: Writefully Embarrassed
Episode 3: Abstract Reactions
Bonus: Research That Talks Back
Final Call to Action: What You Need to Remember

Chapter 10 Turning Research into Real-World Impact
Episode 1: You Lost Me at Lexical Threshold
Episode 2: A BBQ Debrief: Where’s the meat?
Episode 3: Passing on the Torch
Final Call to Action: What You Need to Remember
Final Reflection: The Beginning of Something Bigger

UCINET在
社會網絡分析(
SNA)之應用
質性研究的五種
取徑
R語言學習筆記
:從統計入門到
AI應用
論文統計分析:
SPSS、Am
os與JASP
的運用
社會科學的文本
分析:R的應用
用JASP完成
論文分析與寫作
(完整版)




Chapter 1 From Conference Hero to Journal Zero
You remember the feeling of seeing your name in the conference program, your PowerPoint slides ready, your voice shaking just a little less than usual. You step onto that conference stage and feel like a rising star. But here’s what no one tells you: just because you presented your research doesn’t mean you’ve published it. In fact, the applause from your conference might just be the first hook. The real test begins after you leave the podium, when your advisor looks you in the eye and says, “Now turn it into a journal article.” What comes next? Confusion, rewrites, ego bruises, and eventually… growth. Welcome to your first real taste of academic publishing.

Episode 1: Conference Glory
Scene 1: A strong confidence booster
Back in the spring of 2017, I had the opportunity to attend my second international conference. Only this time, it was held in the United States. To be honest, I hadn’t expected to get in. My professors often talked about how prestigious this conference was, making it sound like an impossible feat. But, against all odds, my submission was accepted. Since I had never faced a rejection in conference submissions before, my confidence soared. It felt like I was Iron Man in the first movie, standing tall with his arm raised as his Stark Industries weapons fired in the background. Conference acceptance can feel like a huge achievement, but it’s only the beginning.

On the last day of the conference, a Japanese researcher approached me and complimented my study. She also told me I spoke lovely English. I smiled modestly and brushed it off, but deep down, I wasn’t sure if she was more impressed by my research or my English pronunciation. Either way, I spent five days absorbing knowledge from experts around the world, then took some time to explore America. It was the perfect mix of academic inspiration and light tourism. I returned to Taiwan feeling rejuvenated, ready to share my experience with my advisor.

Now, my advisor, Professor Elliot, was a seasoned professor, someone who had probably attended more conferences than I had family gatherings. As I sat in his office, excitedly recounting and sharing my conference experience, he listened with a reassuring smile, waiting for me to finish.

“Ted, this is great stuff. You’ve now been to two conferences. It’s time for you to take the next step.”

I nodded, waiting for him to drop the next piece of wisdom.

Scene 2: Manuscripts, roll out! – Academic transformers
“It’s time for you to turn your study into something worthy of a journal.”

“Oh, okay. That sounds like a plan,” I said, trying to sound confident. Inside, my brain was like, “Sure... what does that even mean?”

At the time, I had no idea that this was where the real struggle began. Conferences were one thing, but journal writing? That was an entirely different arena.

“So, professor, which journal should I send my paper to?” I asked.

“Hold on now, let’s not get ahead of ourselves. You don’t have a paper yet,” he said, leaning back in his chair.

I frowned. “Well… I have my conference paper.”

Professor Elliot did his best to hold back a laugh, but he couldn’t help snorting. When he saw my confused expression, he quickly composed himself.

“Sorry, I didn’t mean to laugh. But it’s interesting to see that you’re still new to this.”

Then, instead of giving me direct advice on my conference paper, Professor Elliot did something completely unexpected.

He reached for a thick dissertation that was on his desk, one written by a senior who had graduated the year before. He handed the copy to me.

“Here. I need your help turning this dissertation into a journal-worthy paper for submission. Once you finish this, then we can move on to making your conference paper a journal article.”