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Secondary School Feature Articles
* Heat Capacity, Body Temperature, and Hypothermia,
by Doris Kimbrough, p 48.
* The Electromotive Series and Other Non-Absolute
Scales, by Gavin Peckham, p 49.
* Demonstrations on Paramagnetism with an Electronic
Balance, by Adolf Cortel, p 61.
* Toward More Performance Evaluation in Chemistry,
by Sharon Rasp, p 64.
A Wealth of Useful Information
The January issue is an excellent beginning for the
75th year of JCE service to high school teachers. It is
especially rich in articles of interest to high school teachers. In
addition to Chemical Education Today, 21 contributed
articles have the secondary section logo. Annotations in "In This
Issue" will help you to determine which articles to read
first. Four Secondary School Chemistry Feature articles appear
in this issue: two "Applications and Analogies", a "View
from My Classroom", and our final "Filtrates and Residues".
Thank You, James Schreck
As Filtrates and Residues is phased out, I wish to
acknowledge with gratitude the excellent work of James
Schreck who has edited it for several years. Jim's articles were
always carefully edited and useful to readers. The good news is
that Jim will provide continuins who authored or co-authored
articles appearing in JCE Volume 74 (1997): Michael Jansen
(February), Carla Krieger (March), Stephen West
(March), Damon Diamente (April), Eleanor Siegrist and Guy
Anderson (May), Anthony Garofalo (June), Mark LaPorte
(June), Joseph Baron, Shauna Brammer, Danine Ezell, and
Roger Wynn (July), Thomas Bindel and John Fochi (August),
Carl Stephen Rapp (September), Dave Olney (November),
and Jack Randall (December). Their contributions provide
an authentic glimpse of the quality of teaching, innovation,
and extra effort that JCE readers bring to middle and high
school teaching. All made time among myriad demands to
share their expertise, experience, and good ideas. THANKS!
January - A Time of New Beginnings
The beginning of a new year - the 75th anniversary
year of JCE - is a good time to discuss our ongoing desire to
have more middle and high school teachers write and publish
articles. One stumbling block is the revision process that
nearly always follows review of the original submission. After
making time to write, usually at the expense of meeting
other demands, authors often find it difficult to face the
thought of spending more time in revision. As a result many
good ideas are not refined to the point of being published.
The ability to write about the successful,
innovative things you do in your classroom or laboratory is not
innate, but it is a skill that can be learned. The
Journal of Chemical Education is ready and willing to help you learn that skill.
I was reminded of this recently by an email message from Ron DeLorenzo, editor of the Applications and Analogies
feature. Ron described his own experience in having manuscripts
rejected and noted that reviewer comments may be very
direct and very negative, but invariably they suggest changes
that will improve a manuscript. No author, no matter how
experienced, enjoys criticism of a paper that took many hours
to prepare, just as no student enjoys criticism of classwork
or homework. But such criticism is the basis on which
improved published articles (or improved classroom performance)
are built. We don't usually fix things unless we know they
need fixing, and the fix may not be as hard as the discovery
that our work needs fixing. Rather than assuming you are
alone as an author, think of yourself as part of a team that
includes reviewers and editors, all of whom are striving to
produce the most effective manuscript possible,
At the Journal of Chemical
Education we are willing to go one step further by reading a manuscript draft, or
even an outline, before it is submitted for formal review. Over
the past year I have read several manuscripts and made
suggestions for changes or additions in advance of actual
submission. Some of these have now been published or are in
the process of revision. If you have an idea for a manuscript
or have completed a draft, I would be happy to hear from
you, by email, conventional mail, or fax (see contact
information for Emory Howell in the masthead, p 4).
Why should teachers submit their written ideas for
review? To improve the relevance, quality, precision, and
accuracy of communication. Not every manuscript submitted
will be publishednot even every one that receives
preliminary suggestions from my office. But that should not be a
reason for not trying. All chemistry teachers need access to
articles written by their peers. The high school or middle school
author writes from experience that is similar to the high
school or middle school reader's experience. There will continue
to be a large number of very useful articles written by
college or university faculty members and by chemists from
industry and government laboratories, but only you can
provide the balance to JCE that comes from articles written from
the high school and middle school perspective.
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