期刊名称:ELEMENTARY SCHOOL JOURNAL

ISSN:0013-5984
出版频率:Quarterly
出版社:UNIV CHICAGO PRESS, 1427 E 60TH ST, CHICAGO, USA, IL, 60637-2954
  出版社网址:http://www.journals.uchicago.edu/
期刊网址:http://www.journals.uchicago.edu/ESJ/home.html
影响因子: 1.04(2015年) 1.083(2014年) 1.111(2013年) 1.203 (2012年) 1.172(2011年)
主题范畴:EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH

期刊简介(About the journal)    投稿须知(Instructions to Authors)    编辑部信息(Editorial Board)   



About the journal

The Elementary School Journal

The Elementary School Journal has served researchers, teacher educators, and practitioners in the elementary and middle school education for over one hundred years. ESJ publishes peer-reviewed articles dealing with both education theory and research and their implications for teaching practice. In addition, ESJ presents articles that relate the latest research in child development, cognitive psychology, and sociology to school learning and teaching.

ESJ prefers to publish original studies that contain data about school and classroom processes in elementary or middle schools while occasionally publishing integrative research reviews and in-depth conceptual analyses of schooling.

标题历史记录详细信息

Former titles (until 1914): The Elementary School Teacher (美国) (1545-5858)
(until 1902): The Elementary School Teacher and Course of Study (美国) (1545-5904)
(until 1901): The Course of Study (美国) (1545-5890)

Instructions to Authors

The Elementary School Journal (ESJ) is a forum for disciplined inquiry into issues that affect the quality of education. For more than 100 years, ESJ has served researchers, teacher-educators, and practitioners interested in education in the elementary and middle grades. Over the years, articles appearing in ESJ have included high-quality studies of teaching and learning processes, school leadership and policy, instructional methods and programs, assessment practices, and advances in learning technologies.


ESJ
 publishes peer-reviewed research articles dealing with theory and empirical data that probe important questions of relevance to elementary and middle grades learning and teaching. In addition, ESJ presents articles that relate learning and teaching to theoretical and empirical advances in closely related disciplinary fields such as anthropology, child development, cognitive psychology, linguistics, or sociology.


ESJ
 does not publish articles that have appeared elsewhere, nor does it consider for publication manuscripts that have been concurrently submitted to or are already under consideration for publication in other journals.  The editors encourage the submission of a variety of manuscripts: reports of empirical research, including experiments, quasi-experiments, case studies, ethnographies, design research, and surveys; philosophical or historical analyses; integrative literature reviews and theoretical analyses.


Articles accepted for publication in ESJ must address an important question concerning education in the elementary or middle grades, use research methods appropriate to investigate the question, and be written in a manner that is clear, concise, and coherent.  An accepted manuscript must be of interest to ESJ readers and make significant contributions to the field. The study should address a significant question that is linked to relevant theory and related research; the study design should be sound, and the research methods must be appropriate for answering the research question; conclusions should be warranted by an explicit chain of reasoning in the manuscript.

Peer-review process

After a manuscript is submitted to ESJ, the editor first checks to see if it is within the journal's domain of interests and meets the journal's requirements for style and quality. If the manuscript is not appropriate for ESJ, it is returned to the author without further consideration. If the manuscript is within the journal's domain but does not meet its requirements for style or quality, the manuscript may be returned to the author for revision before processing can continue.


If a manuscript is deemed eligible for review and evaluation, the editor sends the author notification that the manuscript has been received and is being processed for review, and an evaluation is requested from at least two reviewers. Reviewers are chosen for their scholarship and expertise relative to various aspects of the paper. ESJ uses a double-blind review.


When the reviewers' evaluations have been received, the editor notifies the author of the decision to do one of the following:

  • accept the manuscript for publication in ESJ, usually conditional upon some revision by the author
  • express willingness to reconsider the manuscript following substantial revision by the author and further evaluation by reviewers
  • reject the manuscript

 

The editor communicates the decision to the author, including suggestions for a revision or an indication of the reasons for a rejection. Authors also receive copies of the reviewers’ comments and recommendations.


The ESJ editorial office attempts to process manuscripts expeditiously. The goal is to complete the reviewing process within four months. Occasionally, a longer time is required.

Manuscript submission and preparation

To submit your manuscript for publication consideration, please use ESJ's Editorial Manager system at http://esj.edmgr.com. All submissions should include an abstract of no more than 150 words, a cover page (with the title only, no authors’ names or institutional affiliations), and a completely blinded version of the manuscript. Submissions should be no more than 45 manuscript pages in length (including the article’s text, reference list, appendices, tables, and figures), unless there are extenuating circumstances, in which case please contact the journal office before submitting.


Manuscripts must be prepared following the guidelines given in the Publication Manual of the American Psychological Association (6th ed.), including the reference style (APA Order Dept., P.O. Box 92984, Washington, DC 20090-2984; e-mail: order@apa.org). Manuscripts (including quotations, footnotes, references, and figure legends) should be submitted as a double-spaced Microsoft Word document. The first page of the manuscript should include the title of the manuscript but not the authors’ names or institutional affiliations. Authors should make every effort to see that the manuscript (both initial submissions and revised manuscripts) contains no clues to their identities. However, this does not preclude authors from citing their own works. Instead, the anonymous review system dictates that authors cite their works in a manner that does not make explicit their identity. 


Acceptable
: “Smith (1999) has argued that . . .” 


Acceptable
: “Some scholars have argued in the past that . . . (e.g., Smith, 1999; Johnson, 2001)” 


Unacceptable
: “As we have argued elsewhere (Smith, 1999), . . .” 


Unacceptable
: “In a previous study (Smith, 1999), I argued that . . .” 

Conflicts of interest

Any potential conflict of interest should be disclosed to the editors or included in an authors’ note.

Footnotes

Footnotes should be numbered consecutively and placed on a separate page titled "Notes" following the text. Any general note about the manuscript (acknowledgments, grants, etc.) should be unnumbered and should precede numbered notes. Footnotes should be kept to a minimum; the most important information should be presented in the text.

Tables

Each table should begin on a separate page. Use no vertical rules and no leaders anywhere. Number tables consecutively as they appear in text, and place them after the References. Footnotes to a table should be placed at the bottom of the table and cited by the symbols a, b, c, and so on. For further details about preparing tables, please see http://www.press.uchicago.edu/infoServices/prep-table.html

Figures

Figures must be numbered consecutively according to their appearance in text. Figure legends should be on a separate page and placed at the end of the manuscript with figures. For further details about preparing figures, please see  http://www.press.uchicago.edu/infoServices/prep-art.html


Editorial Board

Editor in Chief

Russell Gersten, Instructional Research Group

Editors

Stephanie Al Otaiba, Southern Methodist University
Scott Baker, University of Oregon
Madhavi Jayanthi, Instructional Research Group
Keith Smolkowski, Oregon Research Institute
Jon Star, Harvard University

Managing Editor

Greg Scherban

Editorial Review Board

Jill Allor, Southern Methodist University
Pat Ashton, University of Florida
Arthur Baroody, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Gina Biancarosa, University of Oregon
Geoffrey Borman, University of Wisconsin
Catherine Bradshaw, Johns Hopkins University
Lee Branum-Martin, University of Houston
Jan Bulgren, University of Kansas
Heidi Carlone, University of North Carolina, Greensboro
Charalambos Charalambous, University of Cyprus
Ben  Clarke, University of Oregon
Penny Collins, University of California, Irvine
Carol Connor, Florida State University
Kai Cortina, University of Michigan
Phoebe Cottingham, Institute of Education Sciences (Emerita)
Michael  Coyne, University of Connecticut
Karen Diamond, Purdue University
Joseph  Dimino, Instructional Research Group
Nell Duke, Michigan State University
Mark Dynarski, Pemberton Research
Hank Fien, University of Oregon
Robert Floden, Michigan State University
Doug Fuchs, Vanderbilt University
Lynn Fuchs, Vanderbilt University
Esther Geva, University of Toronto
Melissa Gilbert, Santa Clara
Claude Goldenberg, Stanford University
Doug Harris, Tulane University
Jim Hiebert, University of Delaware
Heather Hill, Harvard University
Annemarie Hindman, Temple University
Robert Jimenez , Vanderbilt University
Nathan Jones, Educational Testing Service
Kirsten Kainz, Strategic Education Research Partnership
Carol Anne Kardash, University of Nevada, Las Vegas
Ben Kelcey, Wayne State University
Michael Kieffer, Teachers College
Janette Klingner, University of Colorado at Boulder
Okhee Lee, New York University
Chris Lemons, University of Pittsburgh
Sylvia Linan-Thompson, University of Texas at Austin
Christopher Lonigan, Florida State University
Dan McCaffrey, RAND
Margaret McKeown, University of Pittsburgh
Rebecca Newman-Gonchar, Instructional Research Group
Kristie Newton, Temple University
Natalie Olinghouse, University of Connecticut
Randy Penfield, University of Miami
Geoffrey Phelps, University of Michigan
Shayne Piasta, The Ohio State University
Therese Pigott, Loyola University Chicago
Patrick Proctor, Boston College
John Sabatini, Educational Testing Service
Mary Schleppegrell, University of Michigan
Jeffrey Shih, University of Nevada, Las Vegas
Rebecca Silverman, University of Maryland
Deborah Simmons, Texas A & M
Mengli Song, American Institutes for Research
James Spillane, Northwestern University
Gabriel Stylianides, Oxford University
Amanda Sullivan, University of Minnesota
William Therrien, University of Iowa
Herb Turner, Analytica Inc.
Kristin Umland, University of New Mexico
Rose Vukovic, New York University
Sharon Walpole, University of Delaware
Jeannie Wanzek, Florida State University
Joanna  Williams, Teachers College
John  Woodward, University of Puget Sound
Rebecca Zumeta, American Institutes for Research  

CONTACT EDITORIAL OFFICE

Email: esj@press.uchicago.edu
Telephone: 734.531.6370

Send all postal correspondence to:

The Elementary School Journal
Attn: Gordon Rudy
The University of Chicago Press
1427 East 60th Street
Chicago IL 60637 USA

Authors please


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