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Selecting Textbooks? If you are thinking about selecting textbooks, this is
a reminder that the Journal has two very handy sources
of information about texts. One of these comes along with
this issuethe Book Buyers Guide.
This spring, as an experiment, we have prepared a
complete Book Buyers Guide, not just a supplement, and
we have also made it a separate document instead of having
it bound in the issue. (If you like this, please tell us!) In
addition, there is always book and textbook information
available every day, all day, via the Chemical Education
Resource Shelf on our World Wide Web site.
New Features and New Faces
With this issue the first of the book reviews done
under Ed Walsh's editorship appear (see pages 343345).
We think that he is off to a very capable and very fast
start--he has only been in the job for a few months. If you
have suggestions for Ed, or if you want to review a book or
publication in some other medium, he would welcome that.
You can reach him at Department of Chemistry, Allegheny
College, Meadville, PA 16335-3902; phone: 814/332-5359;
fax: 814/332-2789; email: ewalsh@alleg.edu.
Another new face is that of Joseph BelBruno, who
will edit a new feature, The Advanced Chemistry Classroom
and Laboratory. See the Announcements section for details
and contact BelBruno if you have ideas or are interested in
contributing.
Look for the Journal Banner
You have two chances to visit a Journal booth and
meet your Journal staff in the next few months. Emory
Howell and his assistant, Caren Daniel, will be at the NSTA
National Meeting that is being held in New Orleans on
April 3-6. He has more information in Especially for High
School Teachers on the opposite page. Then on April 13-18
there will be a booth at the ACS Spring National Meeting in
San Francisco; turn to pages 276-279 for more details. If
you are in San Francisco, look for the
Journal banner on booth 626 of the Exposition. We hope that many of you will
stop by to talk to the staff and to check out
Journal publications. Bring a friend. We will have plenty of introductory and
gift subscriber forms available for your use.
Symposium To Honor J. J. Lagowski
At the ACS Spring Meeting in San Francisco the
symposium "Press On Regardless: J. J. Lagowski and the
Journal of Chemical Education" will be held as a CHED
session on Tuesday afternoon, April 15. Joe's colleagues, former
students, and collaborators will honor him at this
symposium and at the CHED Division banquet that same evening.
More About Who Reads the Journal
Here is the second half of the findings that
resulted from the Journal's survey of its readership that took
place about a year ago. The first part was reported in the
February 1997 issue, page 142.
· On average, how long do you save your copies
of the Journal? 6% < 1 year; 10% 1-3 years; 8%
3-5 years; 75% indefinitely.
· In an average year, how often do you refer
back to specific articles or other content
information in previous issues of the Journal? 1% never; 34% 1-3 times; 32% 4-6 times; 12% 7-9 times; 21% more than 10 times.
· On average, how many other people (besides yourself) read or use your copy of the Journal? (check one). 0, 67%; 1, 21%; 2, 7%; 3, 3%; 4, 1%.
· From the list below, mark the equipment
or technology you and/or your students use on a regular basis. (Check all that apply.)
[Answers are reported in the order: I use; My
Students Use; I Plan to Use in the Future]
a. Fax: 73%, 11%, 5%
b. Email: 75%, 48%, 14%
c. Internet/Internet gopher: 56%, 38%, 19%
d. World Wide Web: 59%, 43%, 20%
e. CD-ROM: 56%, 29%, 20%
f. Calculator: 93%, 76%, 2%
g. Automatic data collection devices and interfaces: 38%, 32%, 20%
h. Structural models, model kits: 76%, 64%, 2%
i. Computer hardware (e.g., PCs): 90%, 71%, 3%
j. Video or multimedia hardware/software: 57%, 27%, 18%
k. Computer software: 89%, 69%, 5%
Remember To Order JCE: CD 1996
Don't forget to order your copy of our prototype of
what will be an annual series of CD-ROMs that contain the
full text and graphics for all articles, features, and reviews
published in the previous year. The 1996 issue can include
only September through December issues, but if you get a
copy and give us feedback there will be two very important
benefits. First, when you complete and return the
questionnaire that accompanies the CD, we will send you a
certificate worth $10 toward the purchase of JCE: CD 1997.
Second, your feedback will be used to shape JCE: CD 1997 and
future issues. An abstract of JCE: CD 1996 can be found
on page 128 of the January 1997 Journal; more
information can be found in this issue on page 281.
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