Hat tip to Jessica Clifton, PhD for this cool resource:
DOAJ is a community-curated online directory that indexes and provides access to high quality, open access, peer-reviewed journals. Most are also free to publish.
I put it on this blog's main page side bar, which also features these permanently featured lovelies:
A
comprehensive web-based textbook that addresses all of the topics in a
typical introductory undergraduate or graduate course in social research
methods.
A textbook of Behavioral and Social Science theory and methods for use in health research.
Templates, examples, and tutorials for designing, conducting, and reporting clinical research.
Advice and guidelines on Reporting Health Research. CONSORT Checklist, etc.
A catalog of (mostly national) databases that are available for secondary analyses
AHRQ Funding Opportunities
Grants for research and training.
AHRQ Funding Opportunities
Grants for research and training.
Tips and advice on how to handle the process and paperwork for grant applications.
PhenX Toolkit
Standardized instruments to measure epidemiological and phenotypical characteristics of subjects.
Because Stata...
Where to submit? Jane suggests journals for your masterpiece.
Useful
and readable section-by-section advice on when to use past, present,
future, and even the dreaded "perfect" tenses in your manuscripts.
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