Before you publish, you must understand your purpose and requirements. Why do undergraduates want to publish**?It is nothing more than these purposes: research protection, award evaluation, study abroad, completion of Daiso projects, plus credits, and so on. No matter what kind of purpose, the general student handbook, the teaching and research office, etc., will have detailed requirements for journals, such as what level of journals need to be issued, how many points are added to the first class of journals and the second class of journals, and no matter how bad it is, ask the seniors and learn from their experience. In short, it is necessary to carefully study the regulations on journals in advance and do not send the wrong journal. There was an author before, and the big conclusion clearly required that it needed to be published on the "CNKI**journal", and this "CNKI**" refers to the inclusion of CNKI, but the author didn't understand it at first, and sent it to the journal included in Wanfang, and when the question was completed, it was found that the journal did not meet the requirements.
Add ** annotation, no more than 140 words (optional) In fact, many undergraduate authors are like this, they have not been exposed to ** before, and they don't know much about journals, so they think they can just publish a journal, and in the end, the journal does not meet the requirements, resulting in a busy job. What are the journal grades?Generally, domestic journals are divided into these levels according to the degree of recognition (how many extra points): foreign core (SCI, SSCI, EI, A&HCI, etc.), domestic core (southern core, northern core, CSCD, science and technology core), undergraduate journals, junior college journals, and general journals. What level of journal should I publish?To be honest, what undergraduates can basically publish is a general journal. As soon as some authors came up, they said that they wanted to issue the Southern Nuclear Power Plant, SCI and EI, but the general journal did not look down on it. Of course, this is not to say that undergraduates can't be issued at all, but to think about the feasibility, which includes academic qualifications (the domestic core basically does not accept undergraduates), time (the core review is normal in two or three months, and the publication cycle is 1 year +), and the level (most undergraduates do not have the level of issuing core journals). Some people say that I have seen undergraduates send cores, and there are, and I didn't say that undergraduates can't send cores 100% of the time, right?However, after all, there are only a very small number of undergraduates who can develop the core, and among these very few successful cases, they basically rely on teachers, and there are very few who work alone. Therefore, it is recommended that you don't look at the masters, especially if you meet the requirements of the general journal and your own level is average, you still have to hit the core, which is really a pure waste of time. How the hell is it published**?Once you understand your requirements, all that's left is how to publish. Publishing**, in short, is actually three steps: writing** - choosing a journal - publishing the next article and then talking about this matter in detail. For more journal knowledge, check out this article: How to Publish in One Shot** and Precautions.
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