Look at your bibliography and see where papers you referenced were published. Those journals are a good place to start. Or you could talk to your professor and ask them - and hopefully get some feedback on your draft and how you might improve it so a journal will consider it. Follow the guidelines when you submit; if you don't, they won't even read it.
http://www.ijser.org/CallForPapers.aspx
http://www.ijser.org/ResearchPaper.aspx
http://www.ijser.org/OnlineSubmission.htm
Wow thank you soooooooooooooo much - I would never have thought to look at journals for ideas on publishing or to look at their guidance for authors. And asking our supervisors to look over papers befpre we submit them - well I would never have thought of that one.
I guess you must be a really experienced academic to be able to impart such wisdom to us mere PhD students?
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"The Interplanetary Journal of Mongoose Studies"
Wow! I actually wish that were real. I would be a subscriber! :-)
You can submit your paper in any conference or journal. If selected then it will be published there. If not selected then you will get review comments, it will help you to improve your research paper for next time submission. You can try this journal ( many other journal like this you can found on net)
http://www.ijser.org
IJSER - International Journal of Scientific and Engineering Research
Yeah, I'm also interested in submitting a paper. I'm in a tight situation... my supervisor is really one-dimensional (I guess this is common for most students) and I want to submit a paper on work that he is not familiar with (but I am). I'm intending to submit a paper without letting him know, do you think this is the right thing to do? Obviously, my level of sophisticated language might not be up to my supervisor's level and I don't mind having it rejected, yet again I'm driving the project.
Is it also common for students around the world to team up, write and submit a paper?
Any help is much appreciated!
Cheers.
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Hi,
The journals are read mainly by professional scientists, so authors can avoid unnecessary simplification or didactic definitions. However, many readers are outside the instant discipline of the author, so clarity of expression is needed to achieve the goal of unambiguous.
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http://www.oppapers.com/
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