From aerj-skills
Builds the positioning argument for an AERJ manuscript by engaging field-wide literatures, naming gaps precisely, and crossing subfields deliberately. Does not write the literature review itself.
How this skill is triggered — by the user, by Claude, or both
Slash command
/aerj-skills:aerj-literature-positioningThe summary Claude sees in its skill listing — used to decide when to auto-load this skill
An AERJ paper must locate itself in the **field-wide** conversation, not just a niche citation cluster.
An AERJ paper must locate itself in the field-wide conversation, not just a niche citation cluster. The literature review establishes the gap, the stakes, and why this study advances understanding for a general education-research reader.
aerj-theory-and-framework: the gap
motivates the conceptual frame.Write one sentence a researcher in a different education subfield would underline. If the only people who would care are already in your niche, broaden the framing or the literatures you engage.
Because AERJ readers span the whole field, referees probe whether the review reaches beyond the author's home cluster. Map your citations against the literatures each lens's reviewers treat as table stakes.
| Lens | Literatures referees expect engaged | Engaging-only-your-niche tell |
|---|---|---|
| Policy/institutional | Policy/governance, organizational, stratification/equity, plus the relevant methods literature | Only program-evaluation cites from one district context |
| Teaching/learning/development | Learning sciences, instruction/curriculum, developmental/cognitive, plus measurement literature | Only recent intervention RCTs in one content area |
| Either | The foundational statement of each construct you invoke | Citing textbook glosses instead of the canonical source |
A quasi-experimental evaluation of a dual-language immersion program initially cites only recent bilingual-education impact studies. A general AERJ reader cannot see why the field should care. The positioning fix maps the paper onto two debates — language-as-resource vs language-as-problem framing (a constructs debate) and how schools allocate access to enrichment tracks (a policy/institutional stratification debate) — then names the precise gap: prior work estimates average effects but never tests the access mechanism. With an illustrative effect of 0.22 SD on biliteracy, the contribution now reads as advancing a field-wide conversation about access, not a program report.
【Conversation map】the 2–4 debates/constructs the paper sits within
【Gap】the precise unanswered question / unresolved tension
【Cross-subfield link】the adjacent literature engaged
【So-what-for-the-field】the underline-able sentence
【Hand-off】how the gap motivates the framework
【Next】aerj-theory-and-framework
../../resources/external_tools.md — reference managers (APA 7th) and literature tooling../../resources/official-source-map.md — AERJ scope and field-wide literature expectationsnpx claudepluginhub brycewang-stanford/awesome-journal-skills --plugin aerj-skillsMaps a manuscript's positioning within current sociological debates for AJS submission. Helps frame the literature section to signal engagement with live theoretical tensions rather than filling gaps.
Tests whether a research topic fits the American Educational Research Journal (AERJ) by evaluating broad significance, dominant lens, and field-wide stakes. Does not generate research questions.
Anticipates editor and reviewer expectations for a Review of Educational Research (RER) submission, framing scope and pre-empting objections to strengthen the manuscript.