

Dr. Merfat Alardawi
360 posts

@Mimi45237233
Asst Prof, Drama & Film Studies @FCM_KAU | Springer Nature Reviewer | Researcher | Founder, @KAUEDU_SA Student Film Festival & Film Criticism Seminar | PhD @DCU









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التوصية رقم مئة لمتابعة هذه التحفة الدرامية مسلسل My Brilliant Friend







There’s pressure across academia: “Publish in Q1 and Q2 journals - anything less is not good enough.” It’s a familiar mantra in many institutions. But it’s worth asking whether this expectation genuinely serves scholarship? Here’s why you should not just focus on Q1 and Q2 journals. 1. Quartiles are not a measure of quality - only of journal-level performance. A Q1 journal can publish weak papers. A Q3 journal can publish groundbreaking ones. Quartiles reflect citation distributions, not journal/article quality. Treating quartiles as a proxy for quality oversimplifies the complexity of research evaluation. 2. “Best fit” often matters more than “best quartile.” A highly specialised paper may have its natural home in a niche journal that sits outside Q1/Q2. Forcing it into a top-tier venue can dilute its relevance, slow down publication, or push it into journals that are not read by the scholars that should be reading your article. 3. Impact comes from usefulness, not quartile labels. A paper can transform industry practice or shape local policy, but appear in a Q3 or Q4 journal, or even one that is not indexed. Real-world impact rarely aligns neatly with journal-level metrics. 4. Over-emphasis on quartiles can distort behaviour. It can encourage scholars to chase metrics instead of questions that genuinely matter. It can push early-career researchers into risk-averse strategies, narrowing creativity and discouraging interdisciplinary work that doesn’t fit the traditional mould. 5. It creates inequities - globally and institutionally. Not all disciplines have the same availability of Q1/Q2 journals. Not all countries or universities have the same access or resources. The expectation of “Q1 or nothing” often disadvantages scholars working in emerging fields or developing regions. For an alternative view, see: x.com/fake_journals/…