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In his first editorial, in January, 1924, Editor Neil
Gordon described these goals for JCE: that the
Journal be a repository for worthwhile work reported at meetings of
the Division of Chemical Education; that the
Journal encourage community of effort in chemical education; that the
Journal encourage teachers to maintain an "investigational
atmosphere" in their classrooms; and that the
Journal report opportunities available through ACS and other scientific
organizations. He also asked readers for constructive
criticisms of the first Journal issues.
In September 1924, after two months of respite
from the pressure of putting an issue together each month
(the Journal was not published in July and August of 1924),
Gordon speculated about the longer-term future. He noted
three suggestions that in his words, "seemed to stand out as
the most promising." These were that each issue of the
Journal would contain abstracts of articles on chemical education
that had appeared in other journals; that there be a series of
articles on application of educational psychology to the
teaching of chemistry; and that the Journal become an
international journal of chemical education.
It is now two years since my term as editor began. (It
is hard to believe that this is my 25th contribution to this
page!) The Journal 's editorial team and I have now had enough
experience to make it worthwhile to look beyond each
month's issue toward the longer-term future. In addition, the
Journal 's 75th-year celebrations have encouraged us to delve into
the past, an exercise that yields a variety of insights.
Consequently it seems appropriate to state where we think the
Journal is and ask for your input regarding where it should be
going and how best to move in that direction.
Neil Gordon's goals for
JCE have become part of the Journal 's
fabric. Many submitted papers indicate that they have
been presented at meetings of the Division of Chemical
Education. Many other submissions serve to encourage
community of effort, and some are from organizations such as
2YC3 or NEACT that are their own communities. So that
teachers will be in touch with the many opportunities
available, we report regularly on activities, programs, and meetings
of ACS, NSTA, AAAS, NSF, and other scientific
organizations and funding agencies. Reports from other journals are a
feature of each issue, including journals that report on
educational research.
Research in chemical education is an
established field that many teachers can contribute to and
on which this Journal reports regularly. Applications
of educational psychology to teaching are described
regularly. Gordon's editorial in September 1924
suggested that the Journal "should have the spirit of
research, where such spirit hovers around research in pure chemical education." I think we
have such a spirit and have had for some time, publishing a
broad range of papers from those who have experimented with
different approaches to teaching. Whether or not the results
have been confirmed by statistical studies, the spirit of research
is manifest in these pages.
The Journal is also international. More than 26% of
our subscriptions go outside the U.S., and a significant
fraction of our submissions and published papers come from
other countries. As a result of efforts of previous editors, in
particular J. J. Lagowski, the Journal serves as the foremost
international forum for discussion of chemical education.
We are quite proud of this and intend that it should continue.
A decade ago, with the help of a grant from the
Camille and Henry Dreyfus Foundation, the
Journal started publishing electronically through
JCE Software. Recently, with another Dreyfus grant, we established a major presence on
the Internet, JCE Online. Full text of every issue that I have
edited is now available via JCE Online+ and on our annual
CD-ROM. And there is a lot more information in our online
features than is in print-especially papers that involve
animations and other items that cannot be presented on the
printed page. Subscriptions to our online service began this year,
and our first annual CD became available in January.
Your Journal is a great success story, but what should
we be doing to maintain that success and where should we
go from here? These are questions on which I would like to
have your input. My primary aim for JCE is that it continue
to serve as a focal point for efforts in chemical education in
the U.S. and worldwide. As I see it, the best way to do that is
to base our efforts and plans on input from as many as
possible of our readers and supporters. If you have time, before
you get caught up in the beginning of the next school year,
please write, email, fax, or communicate with us at a meeting.
We look forward to your insights and inputs.
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