joc-writing-style

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Use when drafting or polishing a Journal of Communication (JoC) manuscript so it reads for the whole field, follows APA 7th edition, and fits the limits (main document <= 35 pages including references/tables/figures/endnotes; abstract <= 150 words). Tightens prose and format; it does not invent content.

brycewang-stanford By brycewang-stanford schedule Updated 6/12/2026

name: joc-writing-style description: Use when drafting or polishing a Journal of Communication (JoC) manuscript so it reads for the whole field, follows APA 7th edition, and fits the limits (main document <= 35 pages including references/tables/figures/endnotes; abstract <= 150 words). Tightens prose and format; it does not invent content.

Writing Style (joc-writing-style)

A JoC paper must be readable by a communication researcher outside its subfield, formatted to APA 7th edition, and disciplined to the 35-page main-document limit and 150-word abstract. This skill is about reaching the field and respecting the format — not about generating claims.

When to trigger

  • Drafting the introduction, framing the contribution, or final polish
  • Over the page limit and needing to cut without losing the argument
  • Writing the ≤ 150-word abstract
  • Aligning citations/headings/format to APA 7th edition before submission

Reach the whole field

  1. Front-load the contribution. By the end of the introduction the reader knows the question, the argument, the evidence, and why it matters to communication broadly. Don't make a generalist dig for the "so what."
  2. Minimize subfield jargon or define it on first use; a health-comm reader should follow a computational-comm paper. Spell out acronyms.
  3. Argument-first prose. Lead with claims; use evidence to support them. Avoid "the data show…" without saying what they show and why it matters.
  4. Signpost. Clear APA-style headings so a reader can navigate the argument.

Format to APA 7th edition

  • Citations: author-date per APA 7th edition; keep one consistent style (manage with Zotero/BibTeX). References are part of the 35-page count.
  • Manuscript: Word (.docx) (not PDF); 12-pt Times New Roman, double-spaced, 1.0-inch margins.
  • Anonymize: JoC is double-anonymous — no author names/affiliations/acknowledgments in the main document or supplemental materials; write self-citations in the third person; strip file metadata.
  • Abstract: ≤ 150 words, stating question, approach, and finding.

Fit the page limit (35 pages include abstract, text, references, tables, figures, endnotes)

  • Move full specs, robustness grids, and codebooks to the supplemental materials.
  • Cut throat-clearing and literature dumps; engage the debate, not every paper (see joc-literature-positioning).
  • Tighten endnotes — they count toward the limit.
  • Prefer one decisive figure to three redundant tables.
  • For a JoC Forum piece, hold to 3,000–6,000 words.

Editor and referee expectations on prose (what trips the desk and the review)

JoC is the International Communication Association's flagship at Oxford University Press, so the desk editor reads the opening pages as a generalist and asks one question fast: does this advance communication theory in a way the whole field can use? The table below maps the most common prose-level failure signals to what a JoC handling editor infers and the venue-specific fix.

Prose signal the editor sees What it reads as at JoC Field-wide fix
Platform/dataset named before a communication process "platform write-up, not a contribution" open on the messaging/exposure/effect process; platform is the empirical site
"Communication" appears only in the title off-scope for ICA's generalist flagship thread the communicative mechanism through intro, hypotheses, discussion
Abstract gives a coefficient but no theoretical move finding without a contribution state construct, mechanism advanced, and field-level stakes
Discussion lists one subfield's implications only too narrow to clear the screen add what another subfield can import

Worked micro-example: tightening a framing-effects abstract (illustrative)

A survey-experiment manuscript tests whether episodic vs. thematic news framing shifts blame attribution on immigration policy. The first abstract draft runs 186 words (over the 150 cap) and ends "results are discussed." Walking it through the rules above:

  1. Cut the two-sentence literature wind-up — engagement belongs in the intro, not the abstract.
  2. Replace "results are discussed" with the finding: episodic framing raised individual-blame attribution by about 8 percentage points (illustrative) versus thematic framing.
  3. Name the theoretical move: the effect is mediated by perceived personal responsibility, advancing framing theory rather than re-demonstrating it.

Revised abstract lands at 142 words stating question, design, finding, and mechanism. The intro's contribution paragraph then carries cross-subfield reach (blame-attribution framing travels to health-risk and crisis messaging), so the paper reads for the field, not political-comm insiders.

Anti-patterns

  • A subfield-insider intro that never states general significance
  • Burying the contribution in the middle of the paper
  • An abstract over 150 words or one that hides the finding
  • Mixed citation styles; first-person self-references that break anonymity
  • Submitting a PDF when JoC requires Word (.docx)

Output format

【Contribution stated by end of intro?】[Y/N]
【Reads past the subfield?】jargon defined / acronyms spelled? [Y/N]
【Abstract】word count (≤150)
【Length】article ≤ 35 pages (incl. refs/tables/figures/endnotes) / Forum 3,000–6,000 words?
【APA 7th + Word .docx + anonymized + third-person self-cites】[Y/N]
【Next】joc-open-science-and-transparency

Supplementary resources

Install via CLI
npx skills add https://github.com/brycewang-stanford/Awesome-Journal-Skills --skill joc-writing-style
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