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October 2003
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Editor's PageJOE Is Here to Stay: A Citation CorollaryIn my August-issue "Editor's Page," I quoted our policy statement on the permanence and continued availability of JOE:
As I said in August, this is information many of you will need to include with your P&T materials. It's also information that influences JOE style for JOE citations. What do I mean? First, JOE has made a commitment to permanence. Again as I said in August, JOE is a "'real' journal, as real as it was when it was published on paper and as real as any other peer-reviewed, refereed journal." It isn't a Web site, and it differs from the sometimes fugitive material found on the Web. Thus, JOE citation style for JOE articles is not the common "Retrieved (date) from (URL)" style. Instead, this is how JOE articles should be cited in JOE: Gorham, E. E., DeVaney, S. A., & Bechman, J. C. (1998). Adoption of financial management practices: A program assessment. Journal of Extension [On-line], 36(2). Available at: http://www.joe.org/joe/1998april/a5.html Second, every article published in JOE from 1978 to the present has a specific URL. This means that citing an article as being available at www.joe.org is true as far as it goes, but it doesn't go nearly far enough. Please cite the specific URL for the specific article. You can find it by using the JOE search site <http://www.joe.org/search.html> or the JOE archive site <http://www.joe.org/archive.html>. October 2003 JOEThere are many good Features, Research in Brief articles, and Ideas at Work articles in the October issue. Reading them will prove my point. But I want to call your attention to the Tools of the Trade section of this JOE issue. It's full of a wide range of interesting--and useful—articles. I work with many Extension specialists on their Extension publications in my role as senior editor in Purdue's Department of Agricultural Communication, so I found "Transformative Explanations: Writing to Overcome Counterintuitive Ideas" particularly relevant. However, that article is only the beginning. Interested in:
The Tools of the Trade section of this issue is a good place to start. Laura Hoelscher, Editor This article is online at http://www.joe.org/joe/2003october/ed1.shtml. 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. If you have difficulties viewing or printing this page, please contact JOE Technical Support. |