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Editor's Page
Greetings, and welcome to the first JOE issue of 2001.
Permission Requests
In the April and August 2000 issues, I referred to the fact that
"JOE works." One of the best proofs is the requests I get for permission
to use or reproduce JOE articles. Since the last issue was published at
the end of December, I've received and granted six such requests.
One came the morning after the issue was posted. It was from an
Extension educator in my own state of Indiana who wanted to use excerpts
from a December article in his county newsletter.
When I grant requests (always, of course, requiring credit to JOE
and to the authors), I "CC" the lead author of the article in question
as a courtesy. Well, this time that courtesy was repaid fast. Almost
immediately, the author e-mailed my Purdue colleague and attached even
more information for him to use. It doesn't get much better than that.
The other requests? One was from a reader who wanted to use a
Commentary from an earlier issue in a "think piece" for new Extension
educators in his state on the "value of JOE."
Another came from the research manager of a childcare agency in
Texas who wanted to modify and administer a checklist published in a JOE
article as part of a study the agency is doing.
Perhaps the most interesting came just this month from a reader in
Turkey. He requested permission to translate an article on marketing and
submit it to a Turkish academic journal, crediting JOE and the original
authors, and identifying himself as the translator.
When I grant the requests I receive (and I grant most of them), I
usually tell people that "that's what JOE is 'there for,' after all."
It's true.
JOE is "there" to serve as a means of professional development for
Extension professionals. It's "there" as a way to share information and
the results of research among Extension professionals. And it's "there"
to share that information and those results even farther.
This Month's Issue
For more on how "JOE works" and why we want to make it work even
better, read the Commentary "The Challenge of Extension Scholarship."
Extension scholarship is a challenge. As its author explains, we must
"continue to meet the needs of Extension professionals and to
demonstrate our relevance to both higher education and the public."
There are also several "pairings" in this month's issue. The
Commentary "Keeping a Traditional Program-Delivery Method in an 'E'
World" and the Tools of the Trade (actually a kind of Commentary,
itself) "Building Working Relationships in Agricultural Marketing" talk
about the importance of our sometimes-overlooked responsibility to help
our clients become more skilled at building and maintaining
relationships.
The Feature Articles "EDUFAIM: A Successful Program Helping Empower
Rural Families Toward Self-Reliance" and "Individual Development
Accounts: The Path to a Dream" discuss ways to help low-income families
become more self-reliant and increase their financial security.
One Tools of the Trade, "Field Tours--An Old Tool That Can Still
Work," offers a simple timeline and checklist to help organizers
organize more efficiently. Another, "Questionnaires for Evaluating
On-Farm Field Days," offers useful information to help us find out if
and how field tours and field days "really work."
But that's less than half of the articles in this month's issue. I
haven't even mentioned my favorite.
Laura Hoelscher, Editor
This article is online at
http://joe.org/joe/2001february/ed1.html.
Copyright © by Extension Journal, Inc.
ISSN 1077-5315. Articles appearing in the Journal become the property of the
Journal. Single copies of articles may be reproduced in electronic or print form
for use in educational or training activities. Inclusion of articles in other
publications, electronic sources, or systematic large-scale distribution may be
done only with prior electronic or written permission of the Journal Editorial Office, joe-ed@joe.org.
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