Manuscript Submission Guidelines for The New RE:view
These guidelines describe the types of articles that TNR accepts and provides instructions on how to prepare and submit your manuscript.
Submitting Your Manuscript
The New RE:view only accepts manuscripts submitted electronically. When your manuscript is ready for submission, you will need to register online with TNR’s electronic portal, Editorial Manager (EM), using the following link: Submit a Manuscript to TNR.
- If you have not previously established an account in Editorial Manager, choose the “Register Now” option to create your account.
- After registering, choose the “Submit New Manuscript” option; then move to the Article Type screen and choose the appropriate category from the drop-down menu.
- Click the Proceed button to move to the Attach Files screen where you can submit your files.
- Click the Proceed button to provide the remaining required information.
- After you complete your submission, EM will build a PDF of your manuscript, which will require approval from you. Your approval is required for your submission to be complete.
If you encounter difficulty, contact us at [email protected]. Questions about manuscript preparation can also be submitted to [email protected].
Article Types Published by The New RE:view
The New RE:view (TNR), a professional journal of AER (Association for Education and Rehabilitation of the Blind and Visually Impaired), provides a forum for professionals to share practice-related insights and findings that offer promising instructional techniques, applications, and strategies. Using a rigorous peer-review process, TNR fulfills its commitment to align practice with theory and research and to assist practitioners in strengthening their services to adults and children who are blind or have low vision.
The New RE:view accepts manuscripts in five categories: Practice Reflections, Practice Reports, Applied Research Reports, Invited Book Reviews, and Views from the Field. The following segments detail the characteristics of these five article genres.
Practice Reflections
The New RE:view defines Practice Reflections as practitioners’ descriptions of ideas and strategies that have effectively served them in teaching particular skills or content areas. Data reports are not required but may be included. Such articles will provide other professionals with ideas that may allow them to enhance the services they provide to students and adults. Practice Reflections are limited to 2,000 words.
Practice Reports
The New RE:view defines Practice Reports as descriptions of methods and materials that implement evidence-based or promising practices. Practice Reports provide evidence from relevant work in the real-world leading to innovative approaches. Unlike controlled studies, they are based upon instruction of learners as part of everyday practice that is consistent with progress monitoring.
Reports of information gathered from anonymous learners usually would not require prior approval by an Institutional Review Board (IRB) to assure protection of human subjects. Authors who are uncertain about whether IRB approval is needed can contact us at [email protected] for guidance. In cases where IRB review is required, upon request of the author, TNR will attempt to connect the practitioner with an IRB. For more information regarding IRB approval, see Guidelines for Protection of Human Subjects at this link: Guidelines for Protection of Human Subjects.
Practice Reports typically contain the following sections: an abstract, a problem relating to practice, a review of pertinent research, and detailed descriptions that will help guide practice.
Tables and figures may be a part of Practice Reports but are not required. Practice Reports are limited to 3,000 words, excluding tables and references. (Contact the Executive Editors at [email protected] if you find it necessary to exceed 3,000 words.)
Applied Research Reports
The New RE:view defines Applied Research Reports as original research and analyses focusing on the needs of individuals with visual impairments, regardless of age. Research reports must include a recognized research methodology, which may include quantitative (group or single-subject designs), qualitative, or mixed-methods research. Systematic reviews of the literature such as meta-analyses and best-evidence syntheses of applied research articles may also be submitted. In all cases, the research published by TNR must be focused on direct application of the research to practice.
Applied Research Reports published in TNR typically contain the following sections: structured abstract, introduction including literature review, methods, results, discussion, and application for practitioners. Applied Research Reports are generally limited to 5,000 words, excluding tables and references. (Contact the Executive Editors at [email protected] if you find it necessary to exceed 5,000 words.)
For more information regarding IRB approval, see Guidelines for Protection of Human Subjects at this link: Guidelines for Protection of Human Subjects
Invited Book Reviews
Book Reviews, invited by TNR’s Executive Editors, are summaries and reactions to current literature in the field with an emphasis on new publications. Book Reviews are limited to 2,000 words
Views from the Field
Information related to developments that affect people with visual impairment are limited to 2,000 words. All such submissions will be accepted at the discretion of the executive editors.
Manuscript Preparation
Manuscripts must be consistent with the purposes of The New RE:view as determined by the editors. Authors are encouraged to provide specific information that will permit their work to be applied by other practitioners and/or researchers. Previously published articles or those under consideration by another publisher will not be accepted by TNR.
Authors must agree to grant the copyright to AER for all manuscripts that are accepted for publication and agree that TNR has the authority to make editorial changes necessary for space requirements, accessibility, readability, and journal standards.
Submissions should include the following files:
- A manuscript without any identifying author information
- A separate title page that includes all author affiliation information (See affiliation details in “Preparing Your Manuscript” section.)
- An abstract if required by the article type
- Completed Alt Text Form if figures (tables, photos, charts, illustrations, etc.) are included in the manuscript
- A separate file for each figure (tables, photos, charts, illustrations, etc.) that is included in the manuscript
- An individual Word (docx) or Excel (xlsx) file for each table included in the manuscript
- A Media Release Form for any photos of recognizable individuals shown in the manuscript
Preparing Your Submission
Manuscripts must be prepared according to the following guidelines:
- Manuscripts must be prepared using the most current edition of the Publication Manual of the American Psychological Association (APA).
- For applied research articles in which human subjects have been used, authors must provide a statement indicating that an IRB has provided approval.
- Authors must disclose the funding agency for supported research.
- Authors must disclose any relationships that could be a possible conflict of interest or could impact impartial presentation of information.
- The abstract for an applied research article or a practice report must be submitted as a separate file and must include the title of the manuscript but cannot include any information that identifies the authors.
- The submission must include a title page that is a separate file containing the title of the submission followed by the names and affiliation information for all authors. The affiliation information must list the lead author followed by all other authors using the author sequence to be shown when published. The name and email address of the corresponding author should be identified separately.
Each author’s affiliation information must be listed in the following order:
Author’s name as it should appear in the publication
Highest academic degree
Certifications (optional)
Occupational title
Current place of employment or affiliation
Author’s mailing address
Author’s phone number
Author’s email address
Include the author’s ORCID number if known.
- The manuscript must be free of any information that identifies the author(s) because the manuscript goes through anonymous peer review.
- The manuscript and accompanying files must be submitted electronically in MS Word, Arial font, 12-point, double spaced with one-inch margins.
- Manuscript pages must have a running head stating a shortened title of the article. This is an abbreviated version of the manuscript title and will be used in the running head of the published article.
- Each page must be numbered in the top right corner of the running head.
- Unabbreviated manuscript titles should not typically exceed 15 words.
- Each figure (table, picture, illustration) in the manuscript must have a numbered “callout” that refers to the figure by its number and indicates the location where the figure should appear. Clearly identify what the figure demonstrates (e.g., “Table 2 showing the results of ….).
- Figures that contain photos must be saved as 300 pixels-per-inch (ppi) JPEG files.
- A completed Media Consent and Release Form must be provided for each individual appearing in photos. TNR’s release form can be downloaded from the “For Authors” section of the TNR site at https://meridian.allenpress.com/the-new-review.
- Authors must include specific Alt Text language for each figure in the manuscript by completing the Alt Text Form available in the “For Authors” section of the TNR site at https://meridian.allenpress.com/the-new-review. Alt Text descriptions identify the information provided in the figure. For details about Alt Text, visit the WebAIM site at https://webaim.org/techniques/alttext/.
Language Disclaimer
We at The New RE:view acknowledge that language use in the context of blindness and visual impairment is an important issue that engenders strong feelings. The most frequent concern is whether person-first or identity-first language should be used. While it has been the practice to use person-first language in formal publications (i.e., a person who is blind), we acknowledge that many people with disabilities prefer identity-first language (i.e., a blind person). We are aware of these differences of opinion, and we acknowledge and respect both perspectives. The Editorial Board of TNR encourages authors to use natural language that describes individual experience.