Title: Reporting Research
1Reporting Research
2Completing the Research Process
- Dr. Robert Warmbrod of Ohio State asserts that
the research process is not complete until the
results are disseminated.
3Why disseminate research?
- It is a responsibility of a professional
- To improve the field by sharing knowledge
- To advance in the profession
- Promotion, tenure and other good things happen to
people who publish their research findings
4Where to disseminate research
- Professional journals
- Conferences
- Monographs
5Professional Journals
- The Journal of Agricultural Education is the most
prestigious journal in our field - Extension is considered to be part of
agricultural education. Thus this journal
publishes both extension and education articles.
It also publishes articles focused on
agricultural communications. - This Journal is published by the American
Association for Agricultural Education.
6Journal of Agricultural Education
- Manuscripts submitted to this journal are
triple-blind reviewed. - This means the authors name is removed from the
manuscript and it is sent to three people in the
field to be evaluated for possible publication. - JAE accepts about 40 of the manuscripts
submitted for review.
7Journal of Agricultural Education
- Manuscripts up to 20 pages in length can be
submitted for review - Manuscripts submitted to this journal and other
journals must be double spaced. - Editorial policies for this journal can be found
at http//pubs.aged.tamu.edu/jae/jae.pdf
8Career and Technical Education Research
- Formerly the Journal of Vocational Education
Research. - This is the most prestigious research journal in
the broad field of career and technical
education. - Articles focus on the broad field of Career and
Technical Education or may be discipline specific
if the article has implication for other CTE
disciplines.
9Career and Technical Education Research
- Manuscripts can be up to 30 double-spaced pages
in length. - Manuscripts are double-blind refereed.
- About 30 of the manuscripts submitted are
published. - This journal is published by the Association for
Career and Technical Education Research (ACTER).
10Journal of Career and Technical Education
- This journal came into existence because some
professionals in the field of Career and
Technical Education believed the reviewers for
the Journal of Vocational Education Research (now
CTER) were too harsh and discriminated against
qualitative research. - The Journal is published by Omicron Tau Theta,
a CTE honorary organization.
11Journal of Career and Technical Eduation
- Manuscripts are double-blind reviewed.
- Manuscript length can be up to 20 double-spaced
pages. - Unlike the previous two journals, each line in
the manuscript is to be numbered. - About 45 of the manuscripts are published.
12Convergence??
- Over the years the Journal of Vocational
Education Research has published more
quantitative articles and the Journal of Career
and Technical Education has published more
qualitative articles (it always has)
13Journal of Extension
- This journal is geared specifically to extension
agents. - Articles are a mix of research, commentary and
sharing of ideas. - Research based articles are reviewed by three
others. - Manuscript length is 3,000 words.
- This journal is published by the Cooperative
Extension Service
14The Agricultural Education Magazine
- This publication is designed for teachers in the
field - Most articles are non-research based articles.
- Articles based on research are published but they
are typically not written in a formal research
style. - Manuscripts are typically six pages or less.
- Manuscripts to be published are selected by the
editor.
152010 Themes Agricultural Education
- Jan-Feb An International View of Ag Ed
- Mar-Apr Developing Professional Relationships
in the Local Community - May-Jun The 1st 7 years Efforts to Reduce
Teacher Attrition - Jul-Aug Innovative SAE Programs for the 21st
Century Students - Sep-Oct Leadership Skills for All Ag Ed Students
- Nov-Dec Using 21st Century Technology in the
High School Classroom
16NACTA Journal
- This journal publishes articles (primarily
research based but some commentary) that focus on
improving teaching at the university level in the
agricultural sciences.
17NACTA Journal
- Manuscripts are double-blind reviewed.
- The Journal is published by the North American
Colleges and Teachers of Agriculture - The manuscript acceptance rate is about 50.
18NACTA Conference
- NACTA has an annual conference in June
- June 22-25, 2010 Penn State
- Theme is Collaborate, Communicate, Celebrate
- Papers and Posters are accepted
- Very High Acceptance rates
19Techniques
- Techniques is a magazine published for classroom
teachers in Career and Technical Education. - It rarely published research based articles,
however each issue does have one research focus
article written in a style appropriate for
teachers. - The publisher is the Association for Career and
Technical Education
20Professional Conferences
- Researchers may submit papers to be presented
orally at professional conferences. - The primary conference for agricultural and
extension educators is the National Agricultural
Education Research Conference (NAERC). - Papers presented focus on agricultural education,
extension education, agricultural leadership,
and agricultural communications.
21NAERC
- This conference is held once a year in May
- 2010 Omaha
- 2011 Coeur dAlene, ID.
- Papers submitted for presentation are
triple-blind reviewed. - The acceptance rate is typically around 40.
- The entire paper has to be submitted (not just an
abstract as do some professional groups).
22NAERC
- Poster proposals are also accepted
- Research posters
- Innovative idea posters
- There is a very high acceptance rate
- Poster presenters stand by their posters and
answer questions about their research
23NAERC
- Submitted papers are 12 pages in length, single
spaced. - Typically PowerPoint is used in presenting the
paper. - Papers presented are bound into a volume titled
Conference Proceedings. This is distributed
electronically.
24Regional Research Conferences
- There are three regional research conferences
patterned after NAERC - Southern (the strongest of the three, meets in
conjunction with the Southern Association of
Agricultural Scientists) - February, 2010 Orlando, FL
- February, 2011 Corpus Christi, TX
- February, 2012 Birmingham, AL
- Western
- Central
- Accept both papers and posters
25Monographs
- Some universities and other agencies produce
research monographs. - A monograph is a nicely composed and printed
document that condenses the research into a 10-15
page document. - This monograph is distributed to other
researchers, the public and those who might have
a particular interest in the topic.
26Some Guidelines for Reporting Research
- Dont write a manuscript, then try to find a
journal in which to publish it. - Before writing an article first identify the
target journal and read other published articles
in that journal to see what they are like and
what is being published.
27More Guidelines
- Write in the third person
- Use terms such at The author or The
researcher. Avoid using I, me, we, etc. - Use past tense (after all, the research has been
completed) - Researchers tend to be cautious and use such
terms as It appears or The data suggests. We
dont climb out on a limb and say this is
absolutely true.
28More Guidelines
- Basically, for research articles, follow the
general outline of a thesis - Introduction
- Need for the Study
- Objectives/Hypotheses
- Theoretical Framework/Review of Literature
- Methodology
- Provide detail on type of research, describe the
population, discuss sampling procedures,
instrument validity reliability, field test,
data collection process, handling non-response
issues - Findings
- Conclusions Recommendations
29More Guidlines
- After writing the article, set it aside for a day
or two, then reread it. - Have a colleague read it and provide feedback.
- If it gets rejected, polish it up and send it to
another journal
30Writing a Book
- Very rarely does one disseminate research
findings by writing a book - However books should be factual and should be
supported by research - Most books are written as textbooks
31So why write a book?
- You have a passion for a topic and want to share
that passion. - There is a need or gap in the field
- For promotion purposes at the university
- To make money
32Writing a book
- Conduct a market analysis to determine if there
is a need for the book - While it is nice to see your name on a book, it
is a lot of effort. Thus, I would only write a
book only if I could reasonably expect to be
financially rewarded. - Potential publishers will often conduct the
market analysis if you approach them with an idea
for a book.
33Securing a Publisher
- Develop a moderately detailed outline of the
table of contents - Write 1-2 sample chapters
- Submit above to a publisher
- In Agricultural Education the primary publisher
is - Cengage (formerly Delmar or Thompson Delmar)
- Sign the contract if everything is a go
- With commercial publishers there is no cost to
the author - Authors of high school text typically get 10
royalty - College texts 15
34What to Avoid
- Vanity Publishers
- You pay them to publish your book
- They dont make any effort to sell your book
- Some Vanity Publishers
- Steffans Publishing
- American Biographical Institute
- Vantage Press
- Xlibris
- AuthorHouse
- PublishAmerica
- Helms Publishing
- Tate Publishing