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Unification of Journal Options
Beginning in 2000, the Journal
subscription form will get much simpler and your
Journal subscription will bring you even more than previously. Below is an outline of
how the new system will work for individuals.
Subscriptions for Individuals
- Beginning September 1, 1999, all
Journal print subscriptionscurrent, continuing, new, and
renewalwill bring you monthly print issues
and give you full access to JCE Online+everything that we
have online.
- If you don't want paper copy of your issue, there is
a No-Print Optionwe donate your print copy to our Teacher Workshop Program and you have full
access to everything online.
- If you do want both paper and online but don't
want to keep back issuessaving storage spaceyou
can purchase JCE CD each year.
A chart illustrating this new system appears below. It
lists all subscription choices for individuals in the U. S., for
ACS Student Affiliates, and for non-U.S. individuals.
Other Subscription Rates
There are now two types of subscriptions for
libraries. These are described under New IP-Address Option for
Libraries, below. For information about Promotional
(larger quantities for workshops, classes, etc.) or Gift
Subscription Award Certificate rates, contact the
Journal (jce@chem.wisc.edu);
1-800-991-5534 (U.S.) or 608/262-5153.
Extensions for Current JCE Online Subscribers
At present there are more than 1,000 subscribers to
JCE Online+: we think of these as our technological pioneers.
These subscribers will have their subscriptions
automatically extended according to the scheme below.
Online Subscription Expires |
JCE Subscriptions Extended By |
| Sept. 1, 1999 - Feb. 29, 2000 |
3 months |
| Mar. 1, 2000 - Aug. 31, 2000 |
6 months |
| Sept. 1, 2000 - Feb. 28, 2001 |
9 months |
| Mar. 1, 2001 - Aug. 31, 2001 |
12 months |
| Sept. 1, 2001 - Feb. 28, 2002 |
15 months |
| Mar. 1, 2002 - Aug. 31, 2002 |
18 months |
| Sept. 1, 2002 - Feb. 28, 2003 |
21 months |
Easy Access to JCE Online
For quick and easy access to
JCE Online, do this. Get the carrier sheet that comes in your
Journal plastic mailing bag, the one with your mailing label on it.
| **************************FIRM 53706 |
| 99990 Z |
Mar 2000 |
Z0142 |
Jane L. Doe
Premier School and College
Avogadro Avenue
Anywhere, USA |
Point your Web browser to
http://jchemed.chem.wisc.edu.
When asked for your name, enter your name exactly as it appears on the mailing label of your
Journal issueeven if it is incorrect!
Name: Jane L Doe
Whenever asked for your password, enter your subscriber number, the first (5-digit) number on the second line of
the label.
Password: 99990
New IP-Address Option for Libraries
While standard username/password access (where all
users share the same access information) may be fine for
some libraries, others find this system too limited and
therefore unworkable. Such institutions have requested access by
IP address, with no prompting for UserName and Password. We believe that this is just the tip
of the iceberg and that many, if not most, library and institutional subscribers will want this
type of access in the near future.
Therefore we have added an
IP-Address subscription option for libraries and
institutions. With this option, the library or institution
provides us with a list of all IP numbers that
will receive access. Any desktop computer using
one of these IP numbers will have immediate
access, without the prompt for name and password.
Because this requires considerably more administrative work on our end, there is a
somewhat larger (but reasonable) fee. Please make your
librarian aware of this new option that will provide you and all your colleagues with
desktop access to JCE.
Immediate Access to Online
At present new subscribers are not able to get
immediate access to JCE Onlinea limitation for subscribers
who order over the telephone using a credit card. We now
have an arrangement with our subscription fulfillment agent
to give new subscribers immediate access to JCE
Online by a guest account. The temporary guest account information
will be provided as a part of the telephone order; when the
new account is active, the account information will be emailed.
Remember to Provide Your Email Address
Knowing your email address has become important
for Journal communication. In addition to account
information, we will send an order confirmation to each subscriber
who provides an email address. For those who want it, we
intend, in the near future, to send an email message
announcing when each month's issue goes online. We do not sell or
give email addresses to anyone else.
Keeping Up to Date with JCE Online
JCE Online will continue to change and expand, as
the technology around us changes and as new features and
columns are added. The best way to keep abreast of new
developments is to look for the JCE Online column in both
print and online. Jon Holmes, editor of JCE
Online, uses this column to keep readers in touch with the latest happenings:
JCE: A Good Deal That Keeps Getting Better
If you carry copies of
JCE around in hopes of finding time to read them, you may think they are getting
heavierand they are. Your Journal was more than a third bigger
in 1998 than it was in 1995! We have printed more pages
every year since 1996 (see graph for the past 25 years).
We estimate that you will receive more than 2000 pages this
year and even more next year. This is more pages than at any
time in the Journal 's history, excepting the four years
1929-1932, when the pages were smaller.
We are printing more pages because we need to. We
have many good manuscripts that have been peer reviewed
and accepted and now are awaiting publication in print. The
time between acceptance of a manuscript and its publication
is already too long. Unless we print more pages, it will
grow longer. For the past three years we have been slowly
but steadily reducing this publication lag, and we don't want
to stop now. JCE accepts only those manuscripts that pass
strict peer review (fewer than half the number we receive), but
we are receiving more manuscripts each year, with no
apparent decline in quality.
A recent analysis of our expenses revealed that to
process a subscription order, print 12 issues of
JCE, and mail those 12 issues to you costs about $37 - exactly what we
charged in 1999 for an individual subscription.
This $37 does not include the cost of the editorial work that goes into
making JCE an excellent journal: evaluating, reviewing, and
working with authors to improve manuscripts, copy editing and
preparing proofs, and laying out and desktop publishing
each of the 600 articles we publish each year.
JCE is a nonprofit operation, but we cannot survive if we provide a
product whose production costs exceed income. Therefore the
Board of Publication found it necessary to increase the
individual subscription fee for next year to $42. This is a 31%
increase over 1995 (less than 21% if inflation is taken into
account), which is significantly below the estimated 40% increase
in number of pages you will receive in 2000.
Another way to see the tremendous value of
JCE is to compare the cost per page for various journals.
JCE costs less per printed page than any other journal we know. A
quick survey revealed that cost per page ranges from 2 cents
for JCE to 2-28 cents for various ACS journals to 46 cents for
a science education research journal published by a
commercial publisher to as much as $2 for a commercially
published science research journal. JCE 's costs to institutional
subscribers such as libraries are even more favorable by
comparison with other journals, because we want
JCE to be accessible to libraries in high schools and small colleges.
How can we afford to be such a bargain? The entire
community of chemical education contributes to writing,
reviewing, and testing the materials we publish. Some
members volunteer even more time as feature editors. The
editorial staff work hard and often spend more than the typical
work week doing their jobs superlatively and making this a
great Journal. The Board of Publication, the Division of
Chemical Education, and everyone associated with the
Journal are dedicated to providing our readers with the best possible
publication at the lowest possible cost. All that effort counts
for a lot, and you are the beneficiary.
What can you do to help continue this tradition of
excellence at minimal cost? Become a JCE Ambassador. Ask
others to join with us as subscribers. Or give them gift
subscriptions (an even better bargain) and encourage them to
continue to subscribe. The more subscribers we have, the less
the cost to each. Also, volunteer your time as an author,
reviewer, column editor, or in some other capacity.
JCE is a great journal because its readers have given of themselves to make
it that way. Please continue to work with us to keep it that way.
Awards
Aspirin Prize
The first international Aspirin Prize for
Solidarity through Chemistry has been awarded to K. C. Nicolaou
of Scripps Research Institute, La Jolla, CA, and the
University of California, San Diego. The prize honors Nicolaou for
his creativity in the synthesis of natural products and for his
development of innovative synthetic methods. Nicolaou
and his colleagues E. J. Sorensen and N. Winssinger
contributed an overview of this area of chemistry to the
Journal in their Viewpoints article, "The Art and Science of Organic
and Natural Products Synthesis", J. Chem.
Educ. 1998, 75, 1225.
The award commemorates the centenary of the first
synthesis of a pure and stable form of acetylsalicylic acid,
the active ingredient of aspirin. Awarded every two years, the
Aspirin Prize is sponsored by Química Farmacéutica Bayer
S.A. (Barcelona) and includes a monetary award of $20,000.
Courses, Seminars, Meetings, Opportunities
Travel Awards, ACS Women Chemists Committee
Women Chemists Committee of the American
Chemical Society is calling for applications for travel awards for
post-doctoral, graduate, and undergraduate women to make
their first research presentation at a national meeting
sponsored by Eli Lilly & Co. For more information and an
application form, contact your department chair;
http://www.tamug.tamu.edu/ascwcc;
or Cheryl Brown, ACS, 1155 16th
Street, NW, Washington, DC 20036; phone: 800/227-5558
ext. 6022; email c_brown@acs.org.
The deadline for receipt of
applications for meetings between January 1 and June 30,
2000, is October 15, 1999; for meetings between July 1 and
December 31, 2000, the deadline is March 15, 2000.
Call for Symposia, Papers, Workshops: 16th BCCE
The 16th Biennial Conference on Chemical
Education will be held July 30August 3, 2000, at the University
of Michigan in Ann Arbor. The conference Web site at
http://www.umich.edu/~bcce
is ready to accept proposals for
symposia, papers, posters, and workshops. Or proposals may
be submitted in writing to the Program Chair, Brian
Coppola, phone: 734/764-7329; email:
bcoppola@umich.edu.
The deadline for submission of proposals for symposia and
workshops is December 13, 1999; the deadline for submission of
abstracts of papers and posters is February 4, 2000. For
general information contact Seyhan Ege, phone:
734/764-7340; email: snege@umich.edu.
16th IUPAC Conference on Chemical Thermodynamics
16th IUPAC Conference on Chemical
Thermodynamics (concurrent with 55th Calorimetry Conference and
10th Symposium on Thermodynamics of Nuclear Materials)
August 611, 2000 Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada This conference will cover
research topics in all areas of
thermodynamics. In addition, there will be a special poster session for
papers on two aspects of thermodynamics education:
lecture demonstrations and undergraduate laboratory
experiments. Come and join us for lobster and learn what is new and
exciting in thermodynamics. To be on the email list for
this meeting, send a message to:
ICCT@IS.DAL.CA.
For further details, consult the conference Web site:
http://IS.DAL.CA/~ICCT.
Chair: Mary Anne White, Department of
Chemistry, Dalhousie University, Halifax, Nova Scotia B3H
4J3, Canada; phone and fax: 902/494-3894, email:
Mary.Anne.White@DAL.CA.
Microscale Workshops
The National Microscale Chemistry Center, located
at Merrimack College in North Andover, Massachusetts,
will offer several workshops in fall 1999, spring 2000, and
fall 2000. Workshops for elementary school teachers run
from 8:30 a.m. on a Thursday to 2:00 p.m. the following
day. Workshops for high school teachers run from 5:30 p.m.
on a Friday until 2:00 p.m. on Sunday. There are also
workshops for college/2-year college/high school teachers that will
be held during summer 2000, from 8:30 a.m. on a Monday
to 2:00 p.m. on Friday.
The workshops include all materials, free housing,
and all meals; there is a registration fee. Early registration is
advised. For further information, contact Mono M. Singh,
Director, National Microscale Chemistry Center, 315
Turnpike Street, North Andover, MA 01845; phone:
978/837-5137; fax: 878/837-5017;
msingh@merrimack.edu.
Carnegie Academy for the Scholarship of Teaching
The Carnegie Academy for the Scholarship of
Teaching (CASTL) has both a higher education and
K-12/Teacher Education component. The CASTL section of the
Carnegie Web site contains a review of the three-part design of
the higher education program and materials and information
developed over the past year:
http://www.carnegiefoundation.org
(click on Program Information and then on CASTL).
This site includes (i) the original press release for the project;
(ii) booklets and information about the Pew Scholars
National Fellowship Program and the Campus Programtwo of
the three components of the CASTL; (iii) links to materials
about the scholarship of teaching and learning newly available
on other sites.
The Pew Learning and Technology Program
The Pew Learning and Technology Program is an
$8.8-million, four-year effort to place the national discussion
about the impact that new technologies are having on the
nation's campuses in the context of student learning and ways
to achieve this learning cost-effectively. The Program has
three areas of work: the Pew Grant Program in Course Redesign;
the Pew Symposia in Learning and Technology; the
Pew Learning and Technology Program Newsletter.
The Pew Learning and Technology Program is
coordinated by the newly created Center for Academic
Transformation at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute led by its
executive director, Carol A. Twigg. The Center's mission is to
serve as a source of expertise and support for those in and
around higher education who wish to transform their academic
practices to make them more accessible, more effective, and
more productive by taking advantage of the capabilities of
information technology. For further information, see the
Center Web site at www.center.rpi.edu
or contact Abbie Basile
at basila@rpi.edu or 518/276-8323.
Materials Available
Outstanding Science Trade Books for Children
The 1999 list of Outstanding Trade Books for
Children, a cooperative project between NSTA and the Children's
Book Council, has been published recently. Published annually
for more than 20 years, the list of outstanding trade books
is intended to help educators, librarians, parents, and
others interested in science education to promote science
through reading. The books are geared for children in grades
K-8. This 1999 list is available through the NSTA Web site
at www.nsta.org/pubs/sc,
or through NSTA's Fax on Demand
service (888/400-NSTA); when prompted, select number
842 to receive a faxed copy of the trade book list.
ACS Pamphlet on Global Climate Change
and Fact Sheet on Chemical Weapons
Global Climate Change, an updated pamphlet that
replaces the 1990 version, presents an overview of the
factors that influence climate and describes the basis of recent
public concerns. The pamphlet explains in clear, concise
language what scientists know and don't know about the
greenhouse effect. The 12-page pamphlet is written for the
nonscientist. It is ideal for science teachers, policymakers, and others
interested in learning more about this global issue.
Chemical Weapons is now available in the Science in
Focus series. This fact sheet explores the issues and lethal
chemicals involved in chemical weapons production. The
4-page fact sheet provides timely information on scientific issues
in order to promote a greater understanding of the
technical issues we face today.
These publications, as well as other information
pamphlets and fact sheets on topical issues affecting society,
are available from the ACS Office of Society Services. Other
topics include Acid Rain; Biotechnology; Chemical Risk:
A Primer; Chemical Risk: Personal Decisions; Ground
Water; Hazardous Waste Management; Pesticides; Recycling;
and Science in Focus: Endocrine Distruptors. To obtain a
single free copy or the price schedule for multiple copies
call 1-800/227-5558 or write to the ACS Office of Society
Services, 1155 16th Street, NW, Washington, DC. The
pamphlets can also be found the ACS Government Affairs
Web site:http://www.acs.org/govt
by clicking publications/reports.
Proposal Deadlines
National Science Foundation Division of Undergraduate
Education (DUE)
For further information about NSF DUE programs consult the
DUE Web site,
http://www.ehr.nsf.gov/EHR/DUE/start.htm.
To contact the DUE Information Center, phone: 703/306-1666;
email: undergrad@nsf.gov.
The Camille and Henry Dreyfus Foundation, Inc.
- Camille Dreyfus Teacher-Scholar Awards Program:
November 15, 1999, and November 15, 2000
- Henry Dreyfus Teacher-Scholar Awards Program:
June 30, 2000
- New Faculty Awards Program: May 15, 2000
- Faculty Start-up Grants for Undergraduate Institutions: May 15, 2000
- Scholar/Fellow Program for Undergraduate Institutions: June 30, 2000
- Special Grant Program in the Chemical Sciences:
Preliminary Proposals: June 15, 2000
Complete Proposals: September 1, 2000
- Postdoctoral Program in Environmental Chemistry: March 1, 2000
- Senior Scientist Mentor: September 1, 1999, and September 1, 2000
Further information may be obtained from The Camille and
Henry Dreyfus Foundation, Inc., 555 Madison Avenue, Suite 1305,
New York, NY 10022; phone: 212/753-1760;
email: admin@dreyfus.org;
WWW:http://www.dreyfus.org/
Research Corporation
- Cottrell College Science Awards: May 15 and November 15
- Cottrell Scholars: First regular business day in September
- Partners in Science: December 1 (the final opportunity for this
program is summer 1999)
- Research Opportunity Awards: May 1 and October 1
- Research Innovation Awards: May 1
Further information may be obtained from Research
Corporation, 101 North Wilmot Road, Suite 250, Tucson, AZ
85711-3332; phone: 520/571-1111; fax: 520/571-1119; email:
awards@rescorp.org;
WWW:http://www.rescorp.org
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