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When contributing to academic journals, how to avoid the discrimination of journal editors against "studying for a master's degree" (many journals directly refuse to study for a master's degree)
The most important thing for a journal is to look at the quality of the paper. The master's thesis is rejected mainly because the quality does not meet the requirements. Good papers will not be rejected in most cases, and bad papers will not be hired just because the author is a lecturer. Even if the author is a professor, papers with low quality will not be easily hired. So I think the title in the author's profile is "lecturer", and then it is meaningless to ask for a change of title after passing it, which may be counterproductive. Most publications are indeed allowed to change authors after approval, which generally refers to increasing or decreasing authors or changing the order of authors. It is suggested that the author add a tutor, and if the paper is hired, it is required to change the ranking or reduce it.