Hello Academia, Do you add your reviews to your CV or where does it need to go. As an academia we may review papers for journals, is there any specific place for our contribution to science ?
Hi, On your CV you may mention that you are reviewing papers for science journals. You may even specify the names of the journals. I think that it improves the overall impression of the CV.
I have not done so in the past, but I do think this may come as a new development to my future CVs. Why not? I think this is work we do for no payment and the least it can do for us is to enhance our CV
I agree with Derek Pyne. I try to disassociate myself with predatory publishers on my website and CV, but I also make a point of listing all of the legitimate journals for which I have reviewed. I also try to distinguish between those for whom I was only a guest reviewer and those that have added me as term-limited reviewer or editorial board member.
In my opinion, reviewer submitted manuscripts is one of the highest forms of professional service as well as a meaningful contribution to disciplinary scholarship overall. I'm proud of the contributions I have been able to make in this manner.
Great. Then I guess I will list the journals and separate guest reviewer from the editorial board members. I just think we all spend time & effort on those papers & should be recognized somewhere, somehow.
Adding to what was said by @Derek Pyne, Your CV is the record of your career related experiences. It is better to put your reviewing experiences in it. Even some journals require this before selecting you as a reviewer.
I believe it would be beneficial. Professorships typically involve some combination of teaching, research, and service. Listing your review participation shows some amount of service to the academic community.
My CV is primarily used internally, such as for my annual performance review. For that internal review, I do include the titles of the papers I have reviewed.
If I need to distribute my CV publicly, I edit a special version to remove things that are not appropriate for the general public, like titles of reviewed articles.
Hi - Yes you should list any journals you are a reviewer for, on your CV/resume. Abslutely you should yes but giving the journal names, not the actual article names that you reviewed for.
Yes, add the list of journals and I recommend you add the number of reviews you have conducted with each journal. You may want to also consider registering an account with publons to help track your scholarly reviews.
Yes..! We do, reviewing scientific papers is the part of research in academia. List out all the journals/conferences where you are the reviewer of the manuscript. As well Publons, which can also help to showcase your peer review contributions. Most importantly, as many as you can serve as a reviewer, you might update the skillset along with the weight of your CV.