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This month marks the end of Emory Howell's
five-year term as Secondary School Chemistry editor of
JCE. During those five years Emory has worked tirelessly
to improve this Journal's effectiveness in serving
high school and pre-high-school teachers. Were it not for
his impending retirement from the faculty of the
University of Southern Mississippi, all of us would have been
able to benefit from another five years of Emory's
excellent service as high school editor. He deserves the
heartfelt thanks of those who read this Journal
and everyone who is concerned about improving science education
in the United States. All of us in the editorial office
say thanks, Emory, for your dedication, intelligence,
empathy, and hard work. You have done a great job, and
we really appreciate it.
Beginning in January 2002, the high school
editorship passes to Diana Mason and Erica Jacobsen.
Diana taught high school chemistry in Dallas for a decade,
is immediate past chair of the Associated
Chemistry Teachers of Texas, carries out demonstration
programs and other outreach activities, and has just joined
the faculty at North Texas State University. Erica is
certified to teach chemistry, physical science, and life science
in Wisconsin and Minnesota, taught chemistry, AP
chemistry, and physics in Wells, Minnesota, for several
years, and has worked in the JCE editorial office on
JCE HS CLIC, our special section of JCE
Online for high school teachers, and on
JCE Classroom Activities. Beginning in the late 1970s when Jim DeRose,
Tom Lippincott, Joe Lagowski, and Mickey Sarquis initiated
JCE's current high-school efforts, and continuing for the past
five years with Emory, JCE has established a strong
tradition of communication with and service to
pre-college teachers. Diana and Erica enthusiastically support
that tradition and intend to expand and enhance it.
Their joint editorship will enable even more time and effort
to be dedicated to the Journal's goal of serving the
high school community as well as we possibly can. If
you have ideas for improving what we are doing,
please communicate them to me, Diana, or Erica.
In my September editorial, I noted that the
public believes that high-quality teachers constitute by far
the most important component of our educational
system, and that the demand for chemistry teachers is
greater than the supply. Better high school materials in
JCE support existing teachers, but all of us should be
doing other things as well. One is to support the
ACS-approved chemistry education option for certification
of undergraduate chemistry majors that has been
available for the past decade under the auspices of the
ACS Committee on Professional Training (CPT). A
program that meets CPT's criteria will prepare excellent
teachers. Unfortunately, both the number of approved
programs and the number of students who have
received ACS-certified chemistry education bachelor's
degrees are small. CPT is currently reconsidering
requirements for such a degree, with an eye to making this
program more popular and effective. CPT is also
considering whether to set criteria for an ACS-approved
chemistry minor intended for those obtaining
teaching credentials in a field other than chemistry.
There are several things each of us can do in support of high school teaching and CPT's
initiative in this area. First, consider the existing CPT chemistry education option by visiting the
CPT Web site for information and discussing the requirements with your chemistry and teacher-preparation colleagues. Could your institution implement such a program? If so,
would you be willing to lead the effort to do so? Would
one of your colleagues be willing? If CPT has
specified too many course requirements to set up a
viable program, how could the requirements be eased
to make it possible for your institution to initiate
a program? Perhaps your investigations will reveal that a chemistry-education degree is not likely to be popular with students no matter how it is set up.
In any of these cases, your input to CPT will be valuable and welcome.
| "If an ACS-certified chemistry-education program appears to be viable at your institution, you could lead the effort to make it happen." |
If an ACS-certified chemistry-education program appears to be viable at your institution, you
could lead the effort to make it happen. This will
almost certainly involve many discussions with
colleagues in your department, throughout your institution,
and possibly at the state-government level. It may
also involve setting up a new course and learning how
to teach it effectively. Finally, once a program exists,
it is necessary to recruit students and to make
certain that school districts in your state or region
are aware of the quality and effectiveness of the
program--and therefore hire your graduates. These
go hand in hand, because good students will be attracted to a high-quality program that leads
to good jobs. It may be difficult to convince
school districts to hire better-trained teachers, because
at present the lesser criterion that teachers be
certified in the field they teach is not always met.
Nevertheless, if all of us were to provide school boards
and state certification agencies with evidence of
our concern and a brief statement of how they
could improve chemistry teaching, it would help a lot.
CPT will be considering these issues at a meeting
in January 2002. Additional opportunities to react
to the outcomes of that meeting will be provided
in symposia at the Spring ACS National Meeting in April and the 17th BCCE in July. Send your
opinions and suggestions now to the chair of CPT's
subcommittee on the chemistry-education option,
Margaret V. Merritt, Chemistry Department, Wellesley College, Wellesley, MA 02481. Each of us needs to support high school chemistry teaching as strongly as possible. Please do whatever you can.
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