ylj-student-editor-review
GitHub解析耶律期刊学生编辑模式,涵盖文章评估标准、注释与评论的发展流程及独特的来源核查机制。适用于理解匿名评审逻辑、准备投稿材料或应对录用后的引文验证环节。
Trigger Scenarios
Install
npx skills add brycewang-stanford/Awesome-Journal-Skills --skill ylj-student-editor-review -g -y
SKILL.md
Frontmatter
{
"name": "ylj-student-editor-review",
"description": "Use when working with The Yale Law Journal (YLJ) student editors during evaluation and acceptance — the Articles & Essays Committee read, the Notes Development process for student authors, and the source-pull. It explains how the student-edited model works; it does not run the intensive line-edit cycle (ylj-revision-and-editing)."
}
Student-Editor Review (ylj-student-editor-review)
YLJ is edited entirely by Yale Law students and is not peer-reviewed. The people deciding and
editing your piece are law students — exceptionally able, reading anonymized, and backed by a rigorous
process. Understanding how they read and verify changes how you prepare. This skill covers evaluation,
acceptance, and the source-pull; the multi-round line editing afterward is ylj-revision-and-editing.
When to trigger
- You want to understand who evaluates the piece and on what criteria
- You are a Yale Law student starting a Note or Comment (Notes Development process)
- An offer arrived and the source-pull / verification is beginning
- You're unsure why a student-edited review differs from peer review
How the read works (Articles & Essays)
- Anonymized. The Articles & Essays Committee evaluates without the author's name, affiliation, or publication history. The manuscript must persuade on its own; reputation is invisible.
- A finished piece is judged. There is no "revise then we'll consider" peer round — the Committee decides on the submitted, near-final manuscript. A rough draft is read as a rough draft.
- What persuades student editors: a crisp, generalist claim (
ylj-thesis-and-contribution); demonstrated novelty (ylj-preemption-check); a clean, complete footnote apparatus they can verify; and prose that reads (ylj-writing-style).
The student-author path (Notes & Comments)
- Notes (substantial student scholarship, first-time cap ~20,000 words incl. footnotes) and Comments (shorter, first-time cap ~7,000 words) are written by Yale Law students, often with Notes Development Editors who help shape the thesis and structure (检索于 2026-06;以官网为准).
- Notes/Comments are also reviewed anonymously; identity is revealed to the Committee only after acceptance.
- If you are a Yale Law student, engage Notes Development early — the thesis-shaping help is part of the model, not a sign of weakness.
The source-pull (what makes student editing distinctive)
After acceptance, student editors pull every source behind every footnote and verify that each cite (a) exists, (b) is in correct Bluebook form, and (c) actually supports the sentence. This is labor your prose either survives or fights:
- A cite that doesn't support its sentence becomes an author query you must resolve.
- A missing pinpoint becomes a request to supply the exact page.
- An un-marked paraphrase that tracks the source becomes an integrity flag.
Prepare for source-pull by finishing ylj-sources-and-bluebook before submission, not after.
Editor-read packet
For a final self-audit, assemble the same packet a skeptical student editor would need to say "yes" without knowing who wrote the piece:
- Anonymous claim map: thesis, contribution type, and the one sentence a generalist should remember.
- Preemption ledger: closest near-miss and why it does not make the claim old.
- Part map: each Part's claim and the objection it answers.
- Source-pull risk register: the 10 most load-bearing citations, each with pinpoint and support note.
- Identity sweep: text, acknowledgments, self-citations, document properties, comments, and file name.
If any item is missing, route backward before submission: thesis gaps to ylj-thesis-and-contribution,
novelty gaps to ylj-preemption-check, and source gaps to ylj-footnotes-and-cite-check.
Checklist
- Manuscript persuades anonymously (no reliance on author reputation)
- Submitted as near-final, not a draft to be co-developed
- (Students) Notes Development engaged early for a Note/Comment
- Footnote apparatus complete and source-pull-ready before submission
- Every cite verifiably supports its sentence (spot-checked the hard ones)
Anti-patterns
- Expecting peer-review-style developmental rounds before a decision (YLJ decides on the finished piece)
- Name-dropping or signaling prestige in an anonymized manuscript
- Submitting with an incomplete apparatus, planning to "finish cites if accepted"
- (Students) treating Notes Development help as optional or remedial
- Sloppy paraphrase that will trip the source-pull integrity check
Output format
【Track】Article/Essay (anonymized read) or Note/Comment (student, Notes Development)
【Anonymized-ready】no reputation cues? Y/N
【Editor-read packet】claim map + preemption ledger + Part map + source-risk register complete? Y/N
【Source-pull-ready】apparatus complete + cites support sentences? Y/N
【Open queries】likely author queries to pre-empt
【Next】ylj-submission (if pre-offer) or ylj-revision-and-editing (if accepted)
Supplementary resources
../../resources/official-source-map.md— student-edited model, Notes/Comments caps, anonymized review../../resources/exemplars/library.md— student-authored YLJ Notes worth studying
Version History
- 1839142 Current 2026-07-05 14:33


