Two reviews per submission might work if we had a clear set of criteria that the reviewers
were following and sufficient training of the reviewers that they were broadly consistent
in their marking. But when you get the same presentation being marked as 5 and 8, as one
of mine was then the suspicion is that the assessors are not working to the same criteria
as each other. That wouldn't matter so much if they were all assessing all
submissions, except that an assessor who varied between 0 and ten points would have far
more influence than assessors who usually voted 6, 7 or 8. But having that level of
inconsistency and only two reviews per submission makes the process a lottery that depends
on who the two reviewers are for your submission.
As for the content of the reviews, I don't consider that either "5
(average)" or "6 (rather interesting) tell me anything as to why my submissions
were rejected.
The other two reviews at least managed one or two lines. One of them even stretched to two
sentences.
Hope Montreal manages something a bit better, I'm sure either Manilla or Perth would
have done.
WereSpielChequers
On 3 Feb 2016, at 23:22, Dariusz Jemielniak
<darekj(a)alk.edu.pl> wrote:
hi,
I have some comments as a person from Academia (and not involved in Wikimania process in
any way):
1. Short reviews are definitely not helping in addressing the frustration of rejection,
yet are quite common in academic peer reviewing, especially for conferences.
2. Double blind peer review (not knowing who is reviewed, and not knowing who reviews) is
a standard in Academia, although some perceive it as contributing to lack of
responsibility (especially true in competitive journal submissions).
3. Two reviewers per submission is absolutely on par with the conference standards
I'm used to. Sometimes there are three, but two is absolutely acceptable (although a
third opinion should be used if the two disagree too much).
4. It could be useful to sensitize the reviewers that the main purpose of the review is
to help the author to do better next time.
5. All this is volunteer work. We should be, generally, grateful to reviewers (but in the
same time grateful to the contributors, too).
best,
dj
On Wed, Feb 3, 2016 at 5:26 PM, Maarten Dammers
<maarten(a)mdammers.nl> wrote:
What kind of ridiculous process is this? This is all I got:
===============
----------------------- REVIEW 1 ---------------------
PAPER: 194
TITLE: GLAM+Wikidata
AUTHORS: Sandra Fauconnier and Maarten Dammers
OVERALL EVALUATION: 8 (Very good)
----------- REVIEW -----------
8
----------------------- REVIEW 2 ---------------------
PAPER: 194
TITLE: GLAM+Wikidata
AUTHORS: Sandra Fauconnier and Maarten Dammers
OVERALL EVALUATION: 6 (Rather interesting)
----------- REVIEW -----------
6
==============
So only two people reviewed this? Who are these people? Why is this secret? Last year I
had 5 people reviewing my submission [1].
Maarten
[1]
https://wikimania2015.wikimedia.org/wiki/Submission_review/5
Op 3-2-2016 om 23:15 schreef Andy Mabbett:
I've just received feedback on one of my
pitches saying, in part:
"Bad boy Andy! This is supposed to be an anonymous review process, so starting your
abstract with your own name, is not entirely fair."
--
Andy Mabbett
@pigsonthewing
http://pigsonthewing.org.uk
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--
__________________________
prof. dr hab. Dariusz Jemielniak
kierownik katedry Zarządzania Międzynarodowego
i grupy badawczej NeRDS
Akademia Leona Koźmińskiego
http://nwrds.kozminski.edu.pl
członek Akademii Młodych Uczonych Polskiej Akademii Nauk
członek Komitetu Polityki Naukowej MNiSW
Wyszła pierwsza na świecie etnografia Wikipedii "Common Knowledge? An Ethnography of
Wikipedia" (2014, Stanford University Press) mojego autorstwa
http://www.sup.org/book.cgi?id=24010
Recenzje
Forbes:
http://www.forbes.com/fdc/welcome_mjx.shtml
Pacific Standard:
http://www.psmag.com/navigation/books-and-culture/killed-wikipedia-93777/
Motherboard:
http://motherboard.vice.com/read/an-ethnography-of-wikipedia
The Wikipedian:
http://thewikipedian.net/2014/10/10/dariusz-jemielniak-common-knowledge
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