name: jmf-writing-style description: Use when drafting or polishing a Journal of Marriage and Family (JMF) manuscript so it reads for an interdisciplinary family-science audience, follows modified APA style, includes the structured abstract (~200-225 words; Objective / Background / Method / Results / Conclusion / Implications), uses bias-free language, and fits the page limit. Tightens prose and format; it does not invent content.
Writing Style (jmf-writing-style)
A JMF paper must be readable by a family scientist from a different discipline, formatted in modified APA style, and disciplined to the page limit (~35 pp.; ~25 for brief reports). This skill is about reaching the family-science audience and respecting the format — not generating claims.
When to trigger
- Drafting the introduction, framing the contribution, or final polish
- Writing the structured abstract
- Over the page limit and needing to cut without losing the argument
- Aligning citations/headings/format to JMF's modified APA before submission
Reach the interdisciplinary family-science audience
- Front-load the family contribution. By the end of the introduction the reader knows the question, the framework, the data/design, and why it matters for families. Don't make a reader from another discipline dig for the "so what."
- Minimize discipline-specific jargon or define it on first use; a demographer should follow a couples-psychology paper and vice versa. Spell out acronyms and dataset names.
- Argument-first prose. Lead with the family claim; use evidence to support it. Avoid "the coefficient was significant" without the substantive family meaning.
- Signpost. Clear, modified-APA section structure (Introduction / Background / Method / Results / Discussion) so a reader can navigate.
Structured abstract (JMF requirement)
~200–225 words, labeled sections (confirm current wording in the Style Guide):
- Objective (1 sentence) — what the study set out to do.
- Background (2–3 sentences) — context that situates the study's importance.
- Method (2–3 sentences) — sample, design, measures, analytic approach.
- Results (2–3 sentences) — key findings.
- Conclusion (1–2 sentences) — what the study concludes.
- Implications (optional) — for research, policy, or practice.
Format to modified APA
- Citations: author-date per JMF's modified APA; keep one consistent style (Zotero/BibTeX).
- Document: Microsoft Word, 12-point font, double-spaced (confirm current spec).
- Bias-free language: follow APA guidelines (gender, sexual orientation, race/ethnicity, family form) — describe families and identities respectfully and precisely.
- Anonymize: JMF is double-blind — no names, affiliations, contact info, or acknowledgements; neutralize self-references to work under review/forthcoming; strip identifying file metadata.
Fit the page limit (~35 pp. article / ~25 pp. brief report; includes tables/figures)
- Move full model tables, robustness, and measurement detail to supplementary materials.
- Cut throat-clearing and literature dumps; engage the debate, not every paper
(see
jmf-literature-positioning). - Prefer one decisive figure to three redundant tables.
What JMF editors reward in the prose
| Element | Reads as JMF-ready | Reads as off-venue |
|---|---|---|
| Opening framing | A family/couple/parent-child question a family scientist recognizes | A within-discipline puzzle only specialists care about |
| "So what" placement | Family-science significance stated by end of the intro | Significance buried in the discussion |
| Cross-discipline access | Jargon defined, acronyms and dataset names spelled out | Demography or couples-psychology insider shorthand |
| Substantive interpretation | Effects in family terms (months, points, percentage points) | "The coefficient was significant" with no meaning |
| Bias-free language | Precise, respectful terms for family forms and identities | Stigmatizing or imprecise labels |
| Abstract | Structured, ~200–225 words, finding visible | Unstructured or finding hidden |
JMF is read across sociology, psychology, demography, and family studies; for this flagship interdisciplinary venue the prose must let a demographer follow a couples-psychology paper and a developmentalist follow a family-demography paper. Modified APA is the house style, and bias-free language about family forms is a firm expectation, not a stylistic nicety.
Worked micro-example: a structured abstract (illustrative)
For the dyadic marital-quality-and-health study, an over-length unstructured abstract becomes a labeled one (illustrative numbers):
Objective. This study examines whether within-person change in marital strain predicts later self- rated health among mid-life couples. Background. Stress-process theory frames marital strain as a chronic stressor and partner support as a coping resource, yet most evidence is cross-sectional. Method. We analyze 1,400 different-sex couples across three waves of a national panel using actor– partner multilevel models with couple-clustered standard errors. Results. A one-point rise in marital strain is associated with an illustrative 0.15-SD decline in self-rated health; the association is weaker where partner support is high. Conclusion. Marital strain operates as a within-couple health stressor, consistent with a buffering account. Implications. Findings inform couple-focused health and family- support interventions.
That lands near 200 words, leads with the family question, and shows the finding rather than hiding it.
Referee/editor-facing pitfalls and the wording fix
- "Intro never states family-science significance." Add one sentence by the end of the introduction that tells a family scholar from any discipline why this matters for families.
- "Inaccessible to other disciplines." Define each framework term on first use and spell out every dataset acronym (PSID, NSFG, Add Health) so the cross-disciplinary readership can follow.
- "Imprecise about family forms." Replace loaded or vague labels (e.g., "broken home") with precise, bias-free descriptions per APA guidance.
Calibration anchors (hedged where uncertain)
- Modified APA, the structured abstract sections, bias-free language, and the page limits are stable house features; the exact word range, font/spacing spec, and page caps are volatile — confirm against the journal's current Style Guide.
- Argument-first, family-meaning-first prose is the reliable register for the venue; the precise heading taxonomy can vary by article type, so follow the current author guidelines.
Anti-patterns
- A discipline-insider intro that never states family-science significance
- An unstructured abstract, or one over the word range, or one that hides the finding
- Stigmatizing or imprecise language about family forms, gender, or identity
- Mixed citation styles; acknowledgments or self-references that break anonymity
- Padding a brief report toward full-article length
Output format
【Family contribution stated by end of intro?】[Y/N]
【Reads across disciplines?】jargon defined / acronyms + datasets spelled? [Y/N]
【Structured abstract】~200-225 words, all labeled sections present? [Y/N]
【Page count】article ≤ ~35 / brief report ≤ ~25 (incl. tables/figures)?
【Modified APA + bias-free + anonymized】[Y/N]
【Next】jmf-transparency-and-data-policy
Supplementary resources
../../resources/external_tools.md— reference managers and modified-APA tooling../../resources/official-source-map.md— structured-abstract spec, page limit, modified-APA, bias-free language