Desk review explained: Editorial judgement, fit, and publishing

Authors

  • Dr Fiona Xiaofei Tang Kaplan Business School, Australia https://orcid.org/0000-0001-5742-016X
  • Dr Jürgen Rudolph Murdoch University, Singapore
  • Professor Tania Aspland Kaplan Australia and New Zealand
  • Vanessa Stafford Kaplan Business School
  • Dr Stewart Alford Kaplan Business School

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.37074/jalt.2026.9.1.5

Keywords:

Desk review, Editorial review, Publishing, Academic journal, Writing

Abstract

For many authors, the editorial desk seems to be something of a black box. A manuscript is submitted, a period of silence follows, and then a decision arrives. When that decision is a desk rejection, it can feel abrupt, impersonal, or difficult to interpret. For editors, however, the desk review is rarely quick or casual. It is one of the most careful and consequential moments in the publishing process.

This Editorial is an attempt to make that moment more visible.

Over the past six months, a striking proportion of submissions to the Journal of Applied Learning & Teaching (JALT), approximately 96%, have not progressed beyond initial editorial screening. Stated plainly, that figure can sound discouraging. It may invite assumptions about rising barriers or increasingly narrow definitions of quality. Yet neither explanation reflects what is actually happening at the editorial desk. The purpose of this Editorial is to explain why desk rejection occurs so frequently, how those decisions are made, and what they mean and do not mean for prospective authors. We also describe common pitfalls and make a case for stylish academic writing.

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Author Biography

  • Dr Fiona Xiaofei Tang, Kaplan Business School, Australia

    Dr Fiona Xiaofei Tang, AFHERDSA, is Managing Editor of the Journal of Applied Learning & Teaching and TESOL in Context (the official journal of the Australian Council of TESOL Associations), and the inaugural Academic Learning Specialist (Academic Level C) at Kaplan Business School Australia. Holding a PhD in Linguistics and an honorary Visiting Research Fellowship at the Australian National University, she brings extensive cross-sector experience in higher education across Australia and China. An award-winning educator and researcher, Dr Tang has published widely on digital education, second language acquisition, flipped learning, textbook evaluation, and teacher professional development. Her editorial leadership is supported by a cross-disciplinary publication record across refereed journals, conference proceedings, edited volumes, and monographs. She is also author/editor of Learnability of Grammar (2017) and both editions of Introduction to Society and Culture of Britain and America (2018, 2021).

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Published

2026-02-11

How to Cite

Desk review explained: Editorial judgement, fit, and publishing. (2026). Journal of Applied Learning and Teaching, 9(1), 5-10. https://doi.org/10.37074/jalt.2026.9.1.5

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