Investigating academic nurse researchers' knowledge, experience, and attitude toward predatory journals

Selecting a journal with an appropriate scope and breadth, well-respected by other scholars in the field, and widely indexed and accessible to readers is an integral part of publishing. Academic publishing has recently seen a significant shift away from traditional print publications and toward open...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of professional nursing 2024-03, Vol.51, p.1-8
Hauptverfasser: Hashish, Ebtsam Aly Abou, Alsenany, Samira Ahmed, Abdelaliem, Sally Mohammed Farghaly
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Alsenany, Samira Ahmed
Abdelaliem, Sally Mohammed Farghaly
description Selecting a journal with an appropriate scope and breadth, well-respected by other scholars in the field, and widely indexed and accessible to readers is an integral part of publishing. Academic publishing has recently seen a significant shift away from traditional print publications and toward open access journals and online publications. The aim of this study was to investigate academic nurse researchers' knowledge, experience, and attitudes regarding predatory journals. A descriptive cross-sectional quantitative study design was conducted using Predatory Journals Questionnaire to collect the data from academic nurse educators working at X and XX University. Almost two-thirds (68.6 %) of participants had previous knowledge of the term “predatory journal.” As well as, the majority of academic educators had previous experience as they had used predatory journals before, as by being asked to publish in their journal (84.3 %) or serve on its editorial board (24.3 %), participants were more likely to receive requests to submit an article to a predatory journal (52.9 %) via email, mail, or phone. In addition, academic nurse researchers had a moderate perspective (mean = 3.87 ± 1.06; mean % score = 71.71) toward predatory journals. Publishing in a predatory journal, whether done knowingly or unknowingly, can harm authors' reputations as academics, their capacity to submit to other journals, and the quality of their work. According to the results of our study, many researchers still lacked a thorough understanding of the predatory journal publishing model, which is a phenomenon that demands an increasing amount of research, despite hearing about the phenomenon of a predatory journal and having previously attended training. •Predatory journals can negatively impact researchers' reputation, ability to submit to other journals, and work quality.•Targeted professional and educational development are essential to comprehend the knowledge levels of faculty members.•Despite prior training, nursing researchers lack a comprehensive understanding of predatory journal publishing.•Academic institutions are in need to invest in staff training on academic writing and misconduct consequences.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.profnurs.2024.01.003
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source MEDLINE; ScienceDirect Journals (5 years ago - present)
subjects Academic
Attitude
Cross-Sectional Studies
Experience
Faculty, Nursing
Humans
Knowledge
Nurse
Organizations
Periodicals as Topic
Predatory journals
Publishing
Researchers
title Investigating academic nurse researchers' knowledge, experience, and attitude toward predatory journals
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