Samhita Vinay

Jul 11, 20203 min

Scientific Writing for Teens

Are you guys eager to put your work out there? Do you want to try something new? Are you interested in science and writing? Well, read on to find out the various creative outlets that are available for you!

Scientific Journals

This section contains journals and newsletters where you can work as a staff writer, independent author, editor, and/or many more. Please remember that this is not a comprehensive list - there are many more journals out there on the internet!

  1. Journal of Emerging Investigators

  2. Zebrafish

  3. Curieux

  4. International High School Science Journal

  5. Columbia Junior Science Journal

  6. E=mc2

  7. Frontiers for Young Minds

  8. Evolution

  9. Engineering Failure Analysis

  10. Questioz

  11. The High School Journal

  12. Quantumrun

  13. The Scientific Student

  14. International Journal of High School Research

How Does Publishing Work?

This section contains a step by step guide to publish in the Journal of Emerging Investigators! This guide does not apply for all journals. The publishing process varies from journal to journal, although some steps are common throughout all journals. Please check the guidelines mentioned on the website of the journal you intend to publish to before submitting your paper.

  1. Pre-Review: This is the first step of the publishing process. In this step, JEI Editors will look over the manuscript and check whether the formatting, style, and presentation follow the guidelines mentioned on their website. If the guidelines are followed, the manuscript will move forward to the next step. Otherwise, the editors will provide suggestions so that the author can fix any formatting, style, and/or presentation issues in their manuscript.

  2. Scientific Review: This is the second step of the publishing process. In this step, the manuscript will be reviewed by three JEI Reviewers. JEI Reviewers are PhD candidates and are assigned to review manuscripts that relate to the scientific fields that they work in. The reviewers will provide suggestions to improve the scientific aspects of the manuscript, including the methods, data analysis, and conclusions. They will also comment on the writing aspect of the manuscript, such as grammatical errors and run-on sentences. The manuscript will be placed in one of three categories: Accept pending presentation changes, Accept pending scientific & presentation changes, and Reject. The "Accept pending presentation changes" category means that the author has to make edits to the scientific manuscript. The "Accept pending scientific & presentation changes" category means that the author has to perform additional experiments in order to better support their conclusions. Manuscripts are rarely placed into the "Reject" category, and are only labeled as a "reject" if there is evidence of plagiarism.

  3. Copy-Editing: This is the third step of the publishing process. In this step, JEI editors and copy-editors will read the manuscript thoroughly and provide any other final edits and minor changes that the author has to make.

  4. PDF Proofing: This is the fourth step of the publishing process. In this step, the manuscript will be formatted professionally and the figures and tables will be inserted in the text. The PDF will be sent to the author for approval and will then be published on the website.

Although it seems like an arduous process, the author can actually expedite the process by making edits quickly whenever they receive suggestions. According to the JEI website, if the author takes 4 weeks to submit revisions every time they receive comments, the entire process will take about 5-6 months. Yes, this sounds like a long duration of time, but remember the end result is definitely worth it!

Scientific Research Resources

This section contains resources that you can use while conducting research. Once again, please remember that this is not a comprehensive list - there are many more resources out there on the internet!

  1. Science Direct

  2. PubMed

  3. HAL

  4. Cornell University Library

  5. Open Access Library

  6. Free Medical Journals

  7. IBIMA Publishing

  8. Horizon Research Publication Corporation

  9. SCIRP

  10. Director of Open Access Journals

  11. NASA: Scientific and Technical Information

  12. Public Library of Science

  13. IDEAS

  14. IntechOpen

  15. MDPI

  16. eLife

  17. HighWire

  18. Emerald Insight

  19. Biodiversity Heritage Library

  20. e-journals

  21. Google Scholar

  22. WorldCat

  23. JSTOR

  24. IEEE Xplore

  25. National Agricultural Library

  26. Education Resources Information Center

  27. NASA Astrophysics Data System

  28. arXiv

  29. CiteSeer

  30. Public Library of Science

  31. Microsoft Academic Research

  32. PLOS ONE

  33. BioOne

  34. IOPscience

  35. CORE

  36. ScienceOpen

  37. Social Science Research Network

  38. OpenDOAR

  39. Bielefeld Academic Science Engine

  40. Digital Library of the Commons

  41. CIA World Factbook

  42. Paperity

  43. dblp Computer Science Repository

  44. EconBiz

  45. BioMed Central

  46. JURN

  47. Dryad

  48. EThOS

  49. Semantic Scholar

  50. Zenodo

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