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For Authors Submission GuidelinesThe Journal of Extension (JOE) is the official refereed publication of U.S. Cooperative Extension. JOE expands and updates the research and knowledge base for U.S. Extension professionals and other outreach educators to improve their effectiveness. In addition, JOE serves as a forum for emerging and contemporary issues affecting U.S. Cooperative Extension education. JOE is written, reviewed, edited, and published by U.S. Extension professionals, sharing with their colleagues successful educational applications, original and applied research findings, scholarly opinions, educational resources, and challenges on issues of critical importance to U.S. Cooperative Extension. Authors submitting articles to JOE must follow the guidelines in this document. Submissions that deviate from these guidelines will be returned to the corresponding authors for changes. Because the guidelines are updated as appropriate, authors should check them again before they submit their articles. JOE is published on the World Wide Web. Authors should prepare their articles with the Web and on-screen reading in mind. This means, among other things, shorter paragraphs and more bullet and numbered lists than are conventional in more traditional, on-paper journals. Help for JOE Authors offers additional information on writing for JOE. Authors should read the material available on this site before they submit articles to JOE. Journal Sections/Article CategoriesJOE accepts submissions in the following categories. Authors should note the differences among the article categories, and the corresponding authors should indicate the category of the articles in the e-mail messages accompanying their submissions. Feature (reviewed by three reviewers): Discuss concepts and research findings of particular interest and significance to U.S. Extension professionals and to U.S. Extension's knowledge base, methodology, effective practice, and organization. Emphasize implications for U.S. Extension. Maximum length: 3,000 words, plus tables, graphics, and abstract. Research in Brief (reviewed by three reviewers): Summarize research results of importance to U.S. Extension professionals. Maximum length: 2,000 words, plus tables, graphics, and abstract. What's the Difference? A Feature focuses on the implications of the data or concepts for as wide an audience of U.S. Extension professionals as possible (hence, the "extra" 1,000 words). A Research in Brief focuses more on the data, itself, and the methods used to gather it. A Feature is broader in scope and implication. A Research in Brief is more specific and localized. Ideas at Work (reviewed by one reviewer): Describe novel ideas, innovative programs, and new methods of interest to U.S. Extension professionals. Maximum length: 1,000 words, plus tables, graphics, and abstract Tools of the Trade (reviewed by the editor): Report on specific materials, books, techniques, and technologies useful to U.S. Extension professionals. Maximum length: 1,000 words, plus tables, graphics, and abstract What's the Difference? An Ideas at Work focuses on what
is novel. A Tools of the Trade focuses on what is useful. An Ideas at
Work focuses on an idea. A Tools of the Trade focuses on a thing. Commentary (reviewed by the editor): Offer a challenge or present a thought-provoking opinion on an issue of concern to U.S. Cooperative Extension. Initiate discussion or debate by responding to a previously published JOE article. Maximum length: 1,500 words, plus tables, graphics, and abstract. What's the Difference? The difference between a Commentary and the other types of JOE articles is challenge, immediacy, and conviction. Submission Formats & Procedure JOE accepts submissions in electronic format only and from
a single designated corresponding author who will be responsible for
all subsequent communication with the editor. For tracking purposes,
the corresponding author should use the same e-mail address that appears
in the submission proper when communicating with the editor.
If the corresponding author is submitting more than one article, he or she The acceptable formats are: Preferred: Microsoft Word (version 5.1 or higher) The corresponding author should send the article to joe-ed@joe.org as an email attachment. The corresponding author should include a complete mailing address (with zip code) in the email message accompanying the attached article so that review results can be returned at the appropriate time. Authors who have questions can contact the editor, Laura Hoelscher, at joe-ed@joe.org or (765) 494-8405. Layout FormatsTitle The title should be centered in upper and lower case on the first line of the article. Author Information JOE takes authorship seriously. Only those individuals who have been directly involved in the preparation of the article itself should be listed as authors, not all who may have been involved in the effort the article discusses. The latter individuals can be acknowledged in a short Acknowledgments section placed between the text of the article and the References section. All authors' names, titles, institutions, cities, and email addresses must be included, and the first author's information should be separated from the title by a double space. Each of these items should be centered in upper and lower case on a separate line. In the case of multiple authors, each author's information should be separated by a single space. (JOE does not include authors' academic degrees.) Main Headings First-level (main) headings within the text should be upper and lower case and use the style Heading 1 in Microsoft Word or the equivalent in WordPerfect. Second-Level Headings Second-level headings should be upper and lower case and use the style Heading 2. (Third-level headings, if appropriate, should be upper and lower case and use the style Heading 3.) Text/ParagraphsParagraphs should be left justified and separated from each other by a single space. That is, authors should use the text block style and should not indent paragraphs by any means. ReferencesJOE does not use footnote or endnotes. Authors are expected to use the JOE search site to locate and cite all relevant JOE articles in their articles. A "References" section should follow the body of the article. It should include only those sources cited in the article. The "References" section and the reference citations in the text should conform to the style of the Publication Manual of the American Psychological Association, Fifth Edition. Citations in the "References" section to online material should include URLs and be formatted according to that manual. JOE has made a commitment to permanence. Thus, JOE citation style for JOE articles is not the common "Retrieved (date) from (URL)" style. This is how JOE articles published before February 2005 should be cited in JOE:
This is how JOE articles published from February 2005 onward should be cited in JOE:
Correctly formatting citations is the responsibility of the author. AbstractThe abstract should appear after the "References" section. The heading "Abstract" (not the title and authors of the article) should be centered and separated from the article by a double space. The abstract text should be left justified and separated from the heading "Abstract" by a single space. The abstract should describe in 100 words or less: (a) the article topic (in one sentence, if possible); (b) the purpose, thesis, or organizing concept of the article and the scope of the article; (c) the sources of data used, if appropriate; and (d) conclusions, recommendations, and implications. The abstract appears on the "Contents" page under the article title. Thus, authors should make their abstracts interesting enough to motivate subscribers to read their articles. Keyword ListThe list should contain no more than five keywords or key phrases. These will be the search terms that will be used to find your article through search engines, so they should reflect the contents of the article. The keyword list should appear at the very end of the article, after the abstract. Table & Graphic FormatsTablesTables should be constructed with the table facility of Microsoft Word or WordPerfect and should be inserted at appropriate points in the text. They should be inserted between paragraphs, not within them. Columns should be separated by single tabs and contain no extraneous spaces or hard returns other than the ones at the end of each row. The number of tables should be kept to a necessary minimum, and they should not be excessively large, particularly horizontally. GraphicsThe recommended maximum file size for JOE articles is 500KB. The JOE Web site is accessed across the world by users with varying connection speeds and system capabilities. Therefore, it is important to minimize the size of graphics used in JOE articles without affecting their quality and impact. Following the requirements and guidelines below should ensure that submitted articles meet these requirements. Graphics may be used in the form of charts/figures or photographs. These graphics should have a material impact on the content of the article and not be used for decorative purposes. General Requirements:
Technical Guidelines:
Figure 1. Resizing an Image in Adobe Photoshop
Again, if you follow these requirements and guidelines, the size of your article should rarely exceed 500KB. Please check the size of your article before you submit it to the editor. If the size does exceed 500KB, double-check that you have followed the guidelines listed above and/or seek the help of a colleague at your institution. Other Format ConsiderationsFontsAuthors should use a single default font and font size for body text. They should not change font color. ListsBullet and numbered lists are encouraged. Hypertext Links Authors may include HTML hypertext links using URLs. Authors should check the links they include immediately before submission. JOE is not responsible for checking these links. Bold, Italics, UnderlineJudicious highlighting using bold and italics is acceptable. Underlining is not acceptable. HTML FormsHTML forms are not acceptable. Other Web EnhancementsJOE does not support other Web enhancements at this time. These include such formats as multimedia (sound/video), applets of all kinds, and Java. This document is online at http://www.joe.org/sub1.html Copyright © by Extension Journal, Inc. ISSN 1077-5315. |