Archive for December, 2011

Reviewing the Reviewers

Monday, December 19th, 2011

The editors of the Annals of Emergency Medicine rate the quality of reviews submitted by peer reviewers. Over 14 years, they collected close to 15,000 reviews from about 1,500 reviewers. Although originally for internal use, the ratings offered an opportunity to study the change in reviewers’ submissions over time.

0In a study published earlier this year, the editors found that nearly all reviewers received lower quality ratings over time.  Overall, the quality of reviews remained high because newly recruited reviewers turned in highly-scored reviews.

The authors speculate that their findings may provide evidence for cognitive decline as reviewers age. That seems overly speculative. More likely is that new reviewers take their responsibilities seriously while senior faculty have less to prove and more competing pressures on their time. Still, their experience makes them valuable voices in the peer review process.

Vita or Vitae?

Tuesday, December 13th, 2011

The CV is an essential ingredient in hiring and promoting faculty. Unlike a resume, the CV grows over time and, for senior professors, can run to dozens of pages.

Appropriately for an evolving autobiographical document, CV stands for "curriculum vitae," or "course of life" in Latin. Few people use the unabbreviated name, preferring to call it a CV or "vita." As I learned in this clear explanation of the etymology of the term, it is never grammatically correct to say "vita." In this case, "vitae" does not designate a plural but rather a modifier of "curriculum."

To make CV plural, the technical way is "curricula vitarum." Of course, no one says that. Furthermore, when you do say "vitae," you should pronounce it "VEE-tye," not "VEE-tay."

Some could argue that modern usage has moved beyond the original Latin. Still, nitpickers abound. It's best not to write "curriculum vitae" or any other title on your CV anyway. Do you write "Cover Letter" at the top of your cover letter? In conversation, it's fine just to say, "CV."