The role of prose quality in scholarship

Better-edited papers fare better in peer-reviewed journals.

Cory Doctorow
4 min readMar 16, 2022

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A red pen laying atop an edited manuscript with bold red editorial marks. The tip of the pen has a supernova flare.

The dominant language of science and scholarship is English, and yet native English speakers do not have a monopoly on scientific and scholarly insights. Some non-native English speakers believe this puts them at a disadvantage when it comes to acceptance in peer-reviewed journals and citations, and pay language editors to improve their prose.

But is it worth it? Does improving the quality of prose improve the perceived quality of scholarship, and with it, the likelihood of being accepted for publication in peer-reviewed journals and citation in further papers? That’s the subject of “Writing Matters,” a new preprint paper.

https://janfeld.weebly.com/uploads/1/1/8/9/118933153/writing_matters.pdf

The paper’s authors are a Kiwi economist (Jan Feld) and two plain language specialists (Corinna Lines and Libby Ross) who run a consultancy in New Zealand. They devised an ingenious experiment to determine what benefit — if any — scholars derive from paying editors to clean up their prose.

They got a bunch of unedited economics papers written by PhD students, and had language specialists rate their prose quality, and also ran the text through a widely accepted empirical “grade level”…

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