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During this 75th year, we have often recalled the
past. It is now time to look to the future and ask what we
might expect in the next 25 years, as the
Journal approaches 100.
I have no doubt that this
Journal will continue to exist, serving and leading the chemical education community.
But in what format and with what content? If the past is any
guide regarding lengths of editors' terms, in 25 years the reins
will be held by the ninth editor-someone who is now
between 20 and 35 years old. And the
Journal will have been shaped by its constituency and its editors into whatever best
suits their collective needs and vision. Extrapolating from our
current system of print, JCE Online+, and
JCE CD, we may well be entirely electronic, both in presentation and
distribution. We certainly will have many new features that haven't
been dreamed of today.
During the next 25 years, many techniques for
transferring all kinds of information via whatever the World
Wide Web becomes will certainly be perfected and become
obsolete. We probably will be much less constrained by the
current schedule of one issue each month. The
Journal also is likely to become much more interactive. An example will
be coming in the spring when JCE Internet will begin a
mediated online discussion of the content of general
chemistry that will build on opinions expressed in an online
conference sponsored by the DivCHED Computer
Committee. And the Journal will almost certainly become more of a
repository for materials that teachers can use directly, such
as our Classroom Activity Sheets and the
computer-readable versions of lab experiments that we now have available.
Chemical education research is emerging as a
full-fledged subdiscipline that will be able to tell us more and more
about what works and what does not in classrooms,
laboratories, and other learning environments. Consequently more
papers will be published that describe research results that apply
directly to how we structure our courses and our students'
activities. The Journal is also likely to include more
interdisciplinary material, such as the collection of
environmental chemistry papers in this issue. Environmental science,
biomedical science, and materials science are vibrant,
growing areas of multidisciplinary activity that are largely based
on chemistry. Our students need to be aware of and trained
to enter these and other emerging multidisciplinary areas,
and this needs to happen before, not after, the areas are
generally recognized as hot. We teachers, and this
Journal as a leader in the community of teachers, need to continue looking
ahead to see what chemical science and chemistry students are
likely to become.
In the past our central science has looked inward
more than it has looked outward. We often seem to draw lines
in the sand and dare other disciplines to cross them instead
of reaching out and making known the broad range of
useful ideas we have to offer. Some of this stems from our
discomfort at involving students with ideas on which we lack
expertise. Biochemistry was certainly peripheral-even
nonexistent-in my undergraduate and graduate preparation.
Like many other chemistry teachers, I have had no formal
education in biochemistry. How then am I to deal with the
new guidelines from the ACS Committee on Professional
Training, which state that the equivalent of a course on
biochemistry should be included in an ACS-approved
undergraduate major? And how am I to explain to my students that,
given the direction much of the research in our field was
going, this decision really ought to have been taken 20 years ago?
As a "living textbook of chemistry", this
Journal will need to address this and many similar issues in the next 25
years. JCE must provide forums, background information,
scientific insights, and materials for classrooms, laboratories,
and other learning environments that help transform the
chemical education enterprise to encompass the new directions
in which chemistry is likely to move. Your editorial staff
cannot do this without continuous input from the
community-that is, from you. We need your efforts as innovators
and visionaries, as authors of papers that describe successful
new approaches, as reviewers who help hone those papers to
their sharpest edge, as readers who take new ideas and
implement them in even better and more effective ways, and as
continuing sources of feedback and suggestions for new
initiatives this Journal can take.
We are approaching a new millennium that will see
tremendous development and change-for this
Journal, for chemical education, and for all of chemistry. Let us all
redouble our efforts to move ourselves, our students, and
our discipline forward. Let us look ahead, not back. Let us
look outward from our central science, forging new
interdisciplinary links and making use of whatever tools we can
devise to help students become more broadly and more
effectively educated for what lies ahead.
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