Submissions

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Submission Preparation Checklist

As part of the submission process, authors are required to check off their submission's compliance with all of the following items, and submissions may be returned to authors that do not adhere to these guidelines.
  • If the submission has been previously published or is under consideration before another journal, the Editors have been informed.
  • The submission file is in OpenOffice, Microsoft Word, or RTF document file format.
  • The text conforms to the Style Guide provided by The Alexander Journal. If the style guide is not followed, the paper shall be returned to the author.
  • The text adheres to the stylistic and bibliographic requirements outlined in the Author Guidelines.
  • Where available, URLs for the references have been provided.
  • All images, charts, graphs, etc, are free from copyright or written permission has been obtained prior to submission.

Author Guidelines

We accept a broad range of articles and submissions. Membership in an affiliated society, for example AmSAT or STAT, is not required. Authors do not have to be certified in the Alexander Technique to submit. To determine the correct placement within The Alexander Journal’s categories, please consult the following list of guidelines, which are also available in our downloadable Author Guidelines.

Alexander Technique Practice, Performance and Education

Articles in this category provide value to the reader by offering insights and practical teaching strategies. They ask questions about methodology and solve problems.

They are often based on a particular teacher’s specialty or area of expertise.

  • Article about principles
  • Article about procedures
  • Article about applications in a particular field, such as the arts

 Specific guidelines for Alexander Technique Practice articles:  

  • Describe the methods and procedures with sufficient clarity and detail so that reader can implement the author’s findings and intentions.
  • Consider the value of your insight for the reader.
  • Avoid vague critiques, i.e., be specific always, but especially if critiquing others, citing as much supporting evidence for your views as is possible.
  • Articles in this category are peer-reviewed in a double-anonymous process and must be submitted in an author-anonymized format, with no identifying information in the text. 

Alexander Technique History

A history research article makes an original contribution to historical knowledge.

They are guided by a historical question, problem, particular insight from or disagreement with another scholar’s previous claim. They are grounded in evidence from primary sources, meaning materials produced during the period your article addresses. This type of article is in conversation with existing scholarship, which often involves secondary sources. Your article should offer a fresh and insightful way to think about a historical problem or insight.

Some examples of topics that fall under the History category:

  • FM Alexander, his life and work
  • Significant people and events in the history and development of the Alexander Technique
  • Scientific, medical, health, and social history of ideas (e.g., economic, education, institutional, and religious), fashions, trends, and arts relevant to the history and development of the Alexander Technique
  • Criticism

Specific guidelines for Alexander Technique History articles:

  • Clearly state sources for quotations and distinguish between what is fact and what is hearsay (apocryphal)
  • Avoid hagiographic (adulatory) retelling of FM's or other well-known teacher’s words
  • If your article criticizes another author or teacher, please be respectful and support your observations with evidence from primary and secondary sources
  • Articles in this category are peer-reviewed in a double-anonymous process and must be submitted in an author-anonymized format, with no identifying information in the text. 

Alexander Technique Quantitative Research

Quantitative Research is used to study the area of interest by generating numerical data or data that can be transformed into usable statistics. It can quantify attitudes, opinions, behaviors, and other defined variables – and generalize findings into hypotheses based on results from a sample population. Quantitative Research uses measurable data to formulate hypotheses and uncover patterns in research. Quantitative research design and data collection methods are generally more structured than Qualitative methods. Quantitative data are analyzed by numerical comparisons and statistical inferences. Data is usually reported through statistical analysis. 

  Basic:

  • How things work, the mechanism, what is the effective element(s)
  • Functional and associated anatomy, physiology, and psychology
  • Psychophysical processes

 Efficacy:

  • Clinical studies and trials that evaluate the effectiveness of Alexander Technique lessons, classes, and demonstrations in various settings

Specific guidelines for Alexander Technique Quantitative Research articles:  

  • Based on measurable research methods with documented sources
  • References current peer-reviewed sources
  • References current review articles whenever possible and avoids cherry-picking to “prove” the author’s argument
  • Presents in language understandable primarily to someone who is not an Alexander Technique teacher
  • Articles in this category are peer-reviewed in a double-anonymous process and must be submitted in an author-anonymized format, with no identifying information in the text. 
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Alexander Technique Qualititive Research

Qualitative Research is primarily exploratory research. It is used to understand underlying reasons, opinions, and motivations and provide new insights. It assumes a dynamic and negotiated reality. It provides insights into the area of interest. Qualitative research helps generate hypotheses and further investigates and understands quantitative data. It can also help to develop ideas or hypotheses for potential quantitative research. It answers the hows and whys instead of how many or how much. Qualitative Research is also used to uncover trends in thought and opinions, and dive deeper into the problem. One of the strengths of qualitative research is its ability to explain processes and patterns of human behavior that can be difficult to quantify. Qualitative data is looking for themes and patterns that can be difficult to quantify, and it is essential to ensure that the context and narrative of qualitative work are not lost by trying to quantify something that is not meant to be quantified.

  • Articles in this category are peer-reviewed in a double-anonymous process and must be submitted in an author-anonymized format, with no identifying information in the text. 

Other Research Methods

This area includes mixed methods and others, e.g., case studies, participatory, multimodal, creative methods, arts-based approaches, community-based research, historical and archival.

Specific guidelines for Other Research Methods articles based on the type of articles: 

  • Based on traditional and measurable research methods with documented sources
  • References current peer-reviewed sources
  • References current review articles whenever possible and avoids cherry-picking to “prove” the author’s argument
  • Presents in language understandable primarily to a layperson
  • Articles in this category are peer-reviewed in a double-anonymous process and must be submitted in an author-anonymized format, with no identifying information in the text. 

Alexander Technique Community

This broad category can include items of interest to the Alexander Technique Community in general and items of historical interest to be preserved for posterity. Their inclusion is at the discretion of the Editors. These items are not peer-reviewed.

  • Professional priorities
  • Keynotes and Lectures
  • Reviews of workshops
  • Reviews of previously published research of interest in scientific and other journals.
  • Items in this category are not peer-reviewed and do not require the author or authors to be anonymous. 

Summaries and Reviews

  • Give a context (scientific, historical, pedagogical) for the question or hypothesis animating the study or studies in question.
  • Describe what the researchers did, including explaining how they studied the phenomena they are exploring.
  • Describe their results.
  • Discuss the implications of their findings.
  • Items in this category are not peer-reviewed and need not be submitted in an anonymized format. 

 

Book Reviews

Reviews of books related to and of interest to the Alexander Technique community. Book reviews are not peer-reviewed or indexed, and do not need to be submitted in an anonymized format.

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