aerj-rebuttal
GitHub专为AERJ修改重投(R&R)设计的回复信生成技能。指导用户逐条回应审稿人意见,协调冲突,维护论文核心贡献,并确保符合匿名与数据透明规范,以提升编辑满意度及录用概率。
Trigger Scenarios
Install
npx skills add brycewang-stanford/Awesome-Journal-Skills --skill aerj-rebuttal -g -y
SKILL.md
Frontmatter
{
"name": "aerj-rebuttal",
"description": "Use when writing the response to an American Educational Research Journal (AERJ) revise-and-resubmit. AERJ R&Rs come back through the handling editor and multiple masked reviewers, so the response must convert each reviewer while keeping the editor confident the revision is convergent. Structures the response letter; it does not fabricate new results."
}
R&R Rebuttal (aerj-rebuttal)
An AERJ R&R is a strong signal — but acceptance generally needs the handling editor satisfied and the reviewers moved toward yes. The response letter must address every comment, defend the contribution, and keep the revision coherent. The editor adjudicates; reviewers advise.
When to trigger
- An R&R decision arrived and you are planning the revision + response letter
- Reviewers disagree with each other and you must reconcile their demands
- A reviewer requests analyses or reframing that would change the paper's claims
- Writing the cover note to the handling editor summarizing the revision
Strategy
- Read the editor's letter as the rubric. The handling editor signals which points are decisive. Solve those first; the editor adjudicates disagreements among reviewers.
- One point-by-point response, every comment addressed. Quote each comment, then respond. Never skip one — silence reads as non-compliance.
- Concede or rebut explicitly, with evidence. For each: did what was asked (say where, with the new text/table number), or push back respectfully with a reason (framework, design, or evidence). A well-argued disagreement beats a hollow capitulation that weakens the paper.
- Reconcile conflicting reviewers openly. When R2 wants the opposite of R3, say so, choose a principled path, and explain the tradeoff to the editor. Don't silently satisfy one and ignore the other.
- Protect the contribution. Add robustness, clarify scope, strengthen the framework — but resist changes that dilute the broad-significance claim that earned the R&R. Defend scope conditions rather than over-claiming.
- Keep masking and standards intact. The revised manuscript stays anonymized; update analyses,
exhibits, and the data/reporting materials so everything remains reproducible and standards-compliant
(see
aerj-transparency-and-data-policy).
Response-letter format
For each reviewer comment:
> [Quoted reviewer comment]
Response: [What we did / why we respectfully disagree].
Change: [Section/page/table-figure number where the revision appears].
Open with a short summary of the main changes to the handling editor; group by reviewer; end each per-comment entry with the location of every change so the editor can verify quickly.
Anti-patterns
- Ignoring or merging away a comment without a visible response
- Capitulating to a request that breaks the paper's logic just to please a reviewer
- Defensive or dismissive tone toward reviewers
- "We thank the reviewer" with no actual change or argued reason
- Adding analyses that quietly contradict the original claim without acknowledging it
- Letting the revised manuscript or exhibits drift out of sync with the data/reporting materials, or reintroducing identifying details that break masking
Triaging reviewer comments (concede/rebut grid)
The handling editor adjudicates, so the letter must signal which comments you accepted and which you contested on principle. Sort each comment into this grid first.
| Comment type | Default move | Editor wants |
|---|---|---|
| Editor's decisive point | Solve fully, first | The change + location |
| Reasonable analysis request | Concede; add it | New result + location |
| Request that breaks the logic | Rebut respectfully | Defense from the design |
| Reviewers want opposites | Pick a principled path | The tradeoff named |
| Minor/cosmetic | Concede in revision | A clean manuscript |
Worked rebuttal vignette (illustrative)
An AERJ R&R on a classroom-discussion intervention returns three reviewers. R1 wants the illustrative 0.19 SD effect re-estimated with school fixed effects; R2 wants the qualitative strand cut; R3 wants it expanded. The editor's letter names integration as decisive. The response concedes R1 (the estimate holds at 0.17 SD) and reconciles R2/R3: cutting the strand would break the integration the editor wants, so the authors expand it and explain the tradeoff. That visible reasoning — not capitulation to every voice — keeps the editor confident.
Pushback patterns and the convergent-revision fix
- "You ignored a comment." → Quote and answer every one; silence reads as non-compliance.
- "You capitulated and weakened the paper." → Defend scope conditions with evidence rather than diluting the broad-significance claim that earned the R&R.
- "The revision drifted out of sync." → Re-anonymize and re-sync exhibits and reporting materials; confirm resubmission steps against the journal's current submission guidelines.
Output format
【Editor's decisive points】addressed first? [list]
【Coverage】every reviewer comment answered? [Y/N]
【Concede vs rebut】each tagged with evidence + change location
【Reviewer conflicts】reconciled and explained to the handling editor? [Y/N]
【Contribution protected】no dilution of broad significance? [Y/N]
【Masking + materials updated】[Y/N]
【Next】resubmit via ScholarOne Manuscript Central
Supplementary resources
../../resources/official-source-map.md— masked review, integrated-journal history, and decision categories../../resources/external_tools.md— reporting standards and reproducibility tooling for the revision
Version History
- 1839142 Current 2026-07-05 12:19


