Where should I publish
my educational materials?
The Genetics
Society of America is pleased to offer several options for the
publication of educational materials. Which one is the
right outlet for you? Here is an overview of the various
options available, as well as a breakdown of what is featured in
each and where to submit.
Peer-Reviewed Education Research
CBE-Life Sciences Education (LSE) was established in 2002 as Cell Biology Education but was renamed in 2006 to reflect the breadth of its coverage, which spans topics in education across all life science disciplines. The journal publishes peer-reviewed articles on life science education at the K-12, undergraduate, and graduate levels. GSA has joined with the American Society for Cell Biology (ASCB) as an editorial partner in the publication of LSE.
What
does LSE publish?
Among many
other things, LSE publishes:
-
Assessment techniques
-
Education research on effective teaching methods with rigorous assessment data
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Research examining appropriate measurements of learning
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Research exploring how students learn
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Research identifying common student misconceptions
Why is LSE different than GSA PREP or Primers in GENETICS?
-
Hard
assessment data must usually be present demonstrating
learning and/or retention
-
This
is education research, sometimes in the abstract; not
usually ready-to-use resources
-
Like GENETICS, LSE is indexed in PubMed and has an
excellent reputation in the community
Where
can I submit a manuscript to LSE?
Please
visit the LSE website to submit an abstract.
Educational Primers
Launched in 2012, Primers are a series of articles in the GSA Journal GENETICS designed to make current research articles useful
in an undergraduate classroom or a senior seminar. Primers
are a road map that aid instructors wishing to use peer-reviewed
articles as the vehicle with which to develop many of the core
competencies in genetics.
What
Primers does GENETICS publish?
-
Research Primers are tied to a current article in GENETICS, and lay out necessary background, explain the
hypothesis or approach, describe the methodology, guide the
readers through the results, and sum up the discussion.
-
Model Organism Primers describe a genetic model system,
including the organism's life cycle, history of its use in
the laboratory, available genetic and genomic tools,
advantages of the system, discoveries made using the model
organism and more.
Why are
the Primers different than LSE or GSA PREP?
-
Articles are typically solicited, are serving a very
specific purpose, and follow the same general layout
-
No
assessment data or resource justification required
-
Specifically tied to the journal GENETICS; Primers
aren't independent resources
-
Primers
are indexed in PubMed along with all other articles in GENETICS
Where
can I submit a Primer?
Please
email the Primer Editor, Elizabeth De
Stasio, to inquire about authoring a Primer.
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