Selected Journals on Teaching and Learning

General Journals, by title: A-B, C-D, E-G, H-I, J-L, M-Q, R-Z

Discipline Specific Journals


General Journals

Academic Exchange Quarterly, ISSN 1096-1453, independent double-blind-peer-reviewed print journal, welcomes research, commentary, and other manuscripts that contribute to the effective instruction and learning regardless of level or subject. See specific Call for Manuscripts In addition to faculty submissions, our primary authorship group, we accept articles co-authored by graduate students and professors. We encourage doctoral students to position themselves as emerging professionals.

Active Learning in Higher Education is an international, refereed publication for all those who teach and support learning in Higher Education and those who undertake or use research into effective learning, teaching and assessment in universities and colleges. The journal has an objective of improving the status of teaching and learning support as professional activity and embraces academic practice across all curriculum areas in higher education.

Adult Education Quarterly is a scholarly refereed journal committed to advancing the understanding and practice of adult and continuing education. The journal strives to be inclusive in scope, addressing topics and issues of significance to scholars and practitioners concerned with diverse aspects of adult and continuing education. AEQ publishes research employing a variety of methods and encourages the submission of innovative and provocative scholarship informed by diverse orientations. AEQ aims to stimulate a problem-oriented, critical approach to research and practice, with an increasing emphasis on interdisciplinary and international perspectives.

The American Journal Of Distance Education (AJDE) encourages the submission of articles about methods and techniques of teaching at a distance, about learning, and about management and administration but also encourages authors to write about policies, theories, and values that drive distance education. Articles should be based on research, although all methods and approaches to research are welcome. Authors are advised to ensure that their work is appropriately grounded in a review of existing literature. Submissions are accepted with the understanding that they will be subject to review and editorial revision and that they neither have been nor will be published elsewhere. AJDE is the internationally recognized journal of research and scholarship in the field of American distance education. Distance education describes teaching-learning in a review of existing literature. Submissions are accepted with the understanding that they will be subject to review and editorial revision and that they neither have been nor will be published elsewhere.

Applied Research and Advanced Practice: Description of a technological innovation and its implementation, even in pilot form, and the provision of evidence that lends credence to its practicality and value. The topic may be large in scale (e.g., a technology tool tested at 10 institutions) or more limited in scope (e.g., a technology tool employed in a science class or in a corporate training program).

Arts and Humanities in Higher Education publishes articles, reviews and scholarly comment relating to the arts and humanities in higher education serving the community of arts and humanities educators internationally. Expertly edited, rigorously peer-reviewed and with a truly international outlook and application, Arts and Humanities in Higher Education is a must-have resource for the many institutions supplying courses within the wide scope of the arts and humanities. The journal publishes significant opinion and research into contemporary issues of teaching and learning critical to all educators and researchers in this far-ranging area.

Assessment And Evaluation In Higher Education (ISSN 0260-2938) Three issues per year. Aim: “Assessment & Evaluation in Higher Education is an established international refereed journal which publishes papers and reports on all aspects of assessment and evaluation within the various disciplines representative of higher education. The purpose of the journal is to help advance understanding of assessment and evaluation practices and processes, particularly in the contribution they make to student learning, and to course, staff and institutional development. Assessment & Evaluation in Higher Education welcomes pragmatic, research-based or reflective studies which help to illuminate the everyday practice of assessment and evaluation in higher education. The journal is aimed at all higher education practitioners, irrespective of discipline, and sets out to provide readily accessible, up-to-date information about significant developments within the field, with a view to the sharing and extension of evaluated, innovative practice.

Australasian Journal of Educational Technology Publisher: ASCILITE – Australasian Society for Computers in Learning in Tertiary Education Journal. The Australasian Journal of Educational Technology is a refereed journal publishing research and review articles in educational technology, instructional design, educational applications of computer technologies, educational telecommunications and related areas. AJET invites submissions of short features (up to 1000 words) and articles (up to 7500 words). Original contributions are welcome from writers in any organisation in any country, and membership of a supporting society is not a requirement for submissions

Australian Educational Computing is the journal of the Australian Council for Computers in Education (ACCE). Subscription is complimentary to members of affiliated computer education groups Australian Educational Computing is the refereed journal of the Australian Council for Computers in Education (ACCE) and is published twice a year. Members of affiliated state computer education groups receive the journal. Other residents of Australia who wish to receive Australian Educational Computing should join the appropriate state computer education group as listed below.

The Canadian Journal of Learning and Technology is a peer-reviewed journal that welcomes papers on all aspects of educational technology and learning. Topics may include, but are not limited to: learning theory and technology, cognition and technology, instructional design theory and application, online learning, computer applications in education, simulations and gaming, and other aspects of the use of technology in the learning process. Manuscripts may be submitted either in English or in French. Includes Research, Literature Reviews Papers, Critical Scholarship , and Position Papers.

Change is a magazine dealing with contemporary issues in higher learning. It is intended to stimulate and inform reflective practitioners in colleges, universities, corporations, government, and elsewhere. Using a magazine format rather than that of an academic journal, Change spotlights trends, provides new insights and ideas, and analyzes the implications of educational programs, policies, and practices. Over the past few years it has included articles on trend-setting institutions and individuals, innovative teaching methods, technology, liberal learning, the curriculum, the financing and management of higher education, for-profit and entrepreneurial higher education, faculty, the changing needs and nature of students, the undergraduate experience, administrative practice and governance, public policy, accountability, and the social role of higher education. We encourage you to submit articles—whether brief expressions of a point of view (750 to 1,500 words) or more extended articles of from 2,500 to 5,000 words—on one of those topics or on others of current importance to higher education. Note: Its supporting organization the American Association for Higher Education has folded. No word yet on if another organization/institution will continue it.

The College Quarterly is an academic journal devoted to the improvement of college education and the professional development of college educators. Focused on colleges in Canada but developed to serve the common needs of college educators in North America and worldwide, CQ is a resource for teaching and learning and provides an opportunity for research publication, information about developments of significance to college educators, and commentary on policy issues of concern to the educational community and its attentive publics.

College Teaching, a unique, cross-disciplinary journal, focuses on how teachers can improve student learning. Each issue includes practical ideas and new strategies for successful teaching. Both new and veteran faculty appreciate the scope of CT’s rigorously refereed articles on classroom research, student assessment, diversity, student-centered instruction, and accountability within the academy. An especially popular page, The Quick Fix, presents easy-to-implement techniques and tips that work. Special sections integrate the best and latest scholarship on teaching such subjects as writing, science, and mathematics. For teachers and administrators determined to enliven the teaching/learning process, CT brings inspiration to college teaching.

Computers & Education Journal Topics covered by reviewed articles: Competence Development in Higher Education, Interactive Learning Environments , Learning Management Systems , Technology: Strategic Issues, Tools for Communication and Collaboration

Currents in Electronic Literacy is a peer-reviewed journal that encourages submissions that take advantage of the hypertext and multimedia possibilities afforded by our World Wide Web publication format, as well as articles concerning the use of emergent electronic technologies. To this end, we gladly accept articles with graphics, sound, and hyperlinks submitted as HTML documents. We ask, however, that such submissions adequately consider reader-access issues. For instance, we ask that, whenever possible, submissions incorporate such accommodations as the inclusion of alt attributes in any image tag and the use of content tags (e.g., citation and emphasis tags) instead of the corresponding physical markup tags (e.g., italics and bold tags). For detailed information about making Web documents accessible to people with disabilities, please refer to the World Wide Web Consortium’s Web Content Accessibility Guidelines 1.0.

Diversity Digest is a periodical published by the Association of American Colleges and Universities to provide campus practitioners with readily available information about successful diversity initiatives around the country. Diversity Digest features the following topics: Campus/Community Partnerships, Curricular Transformation, Faculty Development, Institutional Leadership and Commitment, Research, Student Experience

Education Review publishes reviews of recent books in education, covering the entire range of education scholarship and practice. Education Review is made available to the public without cost as a service of the College of Education at Arizona State University and the Michigan State University Libraries. All submissions are refereed by the Editors.

Educational Evaluation and Policy Analysis EEPA publishes manuscripts of theoretical or practical interest to those engaged in educational evaluation or policy analysis, including economics, demographic, financial, and political analyses of education policies; syntheses of previously completed policy studies, evaluation theories, and methodologies; results of significant evaluation efforts; retrospective views of evaluation studies, and book reviews related to educational evaluation and policy issues.

Educational Technology (ISSN 0013-1962) Aim: Educational Technology addresses varied aspects of the use of technology in teaching and learning, and includes a research section which publishes original studies of technology in diverse educational settings. Articles are especially encouraged that address the contexts in which educational technology supports learning by employing alternative inquiry approaches.

Educational Technology & Society seeks academic articles on the issues affecting the developers of educational systems and educators who implement and manage such systems. The articles should discuss the perspectives of both communities and their relation to each other. Educators aim to use technology to enhance individual learning as well as to achieve widespread education and expect the technology to blend with their individual approach to instruction. However, most educators are not fully aware of the benefits that may be obtained by proactively harnessing the available technologies and how they might be able to influence further developments through systematic feedback and suggestions. Educational system developers and artificial intelligence (AI) researchers are sometimes unaware of the needs and requirements of typical teachers, with a possible exception of those in the computer science domain. In transferring the notion of a ‘user’ from the human-computer interaction studies and assigning it to the ‘student’, the educator’s role as the ‘implementer/ manager/ user’ of the technology has been forgotten.

EDUCAUSE Quarterly (formerly CAUSE/EFFECT) is a practitioner’s journal about managing and using information resources in higher education. It is published by EDUCAUSE four times a year. Articles published in the magazine are referenced in such national indexing and abstracting services as ERIC, Computer Literature Index, and Higher Education Abstracts. EDUCAUSE Quarterly includes articles (written by professionals in the field and peer-reviewed) that relate to planning, developing, managing, using, and evaluating information resources in higher education. Information resources encompass technology, services, and information. In general, EDUCAUSE Quarterly articles deal with the subject of campus information resources from a management point of view. The journal offers feature articles sharing campus experiences; columns dealing with current issues (including national policy issues and campus management issues); articles in the “good ideas” department, viewpoint pieces, recommended reading; and a centerfold story focusing on an EDUCAUSE member campus’s information resources organization and planning strategies.

EDUCAUSE Review is the general-interest, bimonthly magazine published by EDUCAUSE. With a publication base of 19,500, EDUCAUSE Review is sent to EDUCAUSE member representatives as well as to presidents/chancellors, senior academic and administrative leaders, non-IT staff, faculty in all disciplines, librarians, and corporations. The magazine takes a broad look at current developments and trends in information technology, what these mean for higher education, and how they may affect the college/university as a whole.

EFFECTIVE TEACHING is an electronic journal devoted to the exchange of ideas and information relevant to college and university teaching in North Carolina. Submissions of articles, research notes, reviews, announcements, ideas, opinions, and questions must meet this requirement to be considered for publication. Therefore, an article dealing, say, with the teaching of large classes, likely would qualify wherever the information has been gathered. Conversely, articles and research notes on topics irrelevant to college and university teaching in North Carolina will not be considered for publication in EFFECTIVE TEACHING. Contributors are encouraged to submit manuscripts that include sound, videos, links, animations, and other innovative uses of cyberspace media, but high quality prevails as the standard of acceptance.

The e-Journal of Instructional Science and Technology (e-JIST) is an International peer-reviewed electronic journal. ( Australian-based) The Journal is an multi-faceted publication with content likely to be of interest to policy makers, managers, investors, professional staff, technical staff, and academics within education and training.Contributions may cover theoretical and applied discussion of contemporary issues, review research in particular fields, report on specific research, describe recent technical developments and contribute to debate in a wide range of areas including foundations of instructional science, practice of instructional design in education and training, instructional delivery technologies, management and administration of instructional technology, evaluation of instructional design input, and future developments.Since so much of current development occurs in a multi-disciplinary context, perspectives reflecting specific discipline approaches are encouraged. In addition to considering reports of empirical investigations – which will usually follow standard presentation – the e-JIST will consider presentations, especially of on-going research and developmental or innovative work, which do not fit orthodox presentation format.

Electronic Journal of e-Learning provides perspectives on topics relevant to the study, implementation and management of e-Learning initiatives.The journal contributes to the development of both theory and practice in the field of e-Learning. The journal accepts academically robust papers, topical articles and case studies that contribute to the area of research in e-Learning.

The Encyclopedia of Educational Technology (EET) is a collection of short multimedia articles on a variety of topics related to the fields of instructional design and education and training. The primary audiences for the EET are students and novice to intermediate practitioners in these fields, who need a brief overview as a starting point to further research on specific topics. Authors are graduate students, professors, and others who contribute voluntarily. Articles are short and use multimedia to enrich learning rather than merely decorate the pages.

Essays on Teaching Excellence is a series of eight short and succinct scholarly essays distributed by the POD Network on a annual subscription basis. Teaching Excellence presents thoughtful and useful viewpoints from which college teachers can look at their practice of instruction. The ideas expressed range from philosophical views to speculation on the effects of those philosophies. Written in concise and non technical language and supported by current research, the essays in Teaching Excellence will assist instructors to reflect upon and refine their practice of teaching to achieve the results they seek – students learning to the best of their abilities.

European Journal of Open and Distance and e-Learning The journal primarily but not exclusively draws on European sources and authors for content. It intends to cover all sectors within education and training, by both level and field (eg from K1-12 (according to the British system), and from training through to Higher Education). It wishes to promote the work of both researchers and practitioners in education, and the public and private sectors.

Games and Culture: A Journal of Interactive Media is a new, quarterly international journal (first issue due January 2006) that aims to publish innovative theoretical and empirical research about games and culture within the context of interactive media. The journal will serve as a premiere outlet for ground-breaking and germinal work in the field of game studies. Games and Culture’s scope will include the socio-cultural, political, and economic dimensions of gaming from a wide variety of perspectives, including textual analysis; political economy; cultural studies; ethnography; critical race studies; gender studies; media studies; public policy; international relations; and communication studies.

The Harvard Educational Review (ISSN 0017-8055) is a scholarly journal of opinion and research in education. Its mission is to provide an interdisciplinary forum for discussion and debate about education’s most vital issues. Since its founding in 1930, the Review has become one of the most prestigious journals in education, with circulation to policymakers, researchers, administrators, and teachers. Each year, the Review covers a wide range of topics of current concern in education. Each quarterly issue of the Review is book length, containing a variety of articles, essays, and book reviews.

Innovate

is a bimonthly, peer-reviewed online periodical (ISSN 1552-3233) published by the Fischler School of Education and Human Services at Nova Southeastern University . The journal focuses on the creative use of information technology (IT) to enhance educational processes in academic, commercial, and government settings. Articles generally fall into one of the following categories:

Innovative Higher Education, is a refereed scholarly journal with a distinguished and internationally known editorial review board. Its editorial goals are: To present descriptions and evaluations of innovations and provocative new ideas with relevance for action beyond the immediate context in higher education; To focus on the effect of such innovations on teaching and students; To be open to diverse forms of scholarship and research methods by maintaining flexibility in the selection of topics deemed appropriate for the journal; and to strike a balance between practice and theory by presenting manuscripts in a readable and scholarly manner to both faculty and administrators in the academic community.

Interactive Multimedia Electronic Journal of Computer-Enhanced Learning (IMEJ) is a prototype for an interactive multimedia electronic journal edited and produced at Wake Forest University. Procedures for Submission. The goals of IMEJ are to provide a peer-reviewed forum for innovations in computer-enhanced learning, to serve as a model and test bed for an electronic journal with a high level of multimedia and interactivity, and to advance the acceptance of electronic publication as a legitimate and valuable form of academic discourse.

International Journal for the Scholarship of Teaching & Learning, A new, international, peer-reviewed, open access eJournal will be published by the Center for Excellence in Teaching at Georgia Southern University (Statesboro, Georgia, USA) with the inaugural issue scheduled for January 2007. The inaugural issue will contain research articles, essays, personal reflections, and invited essays by Pat Hutchings (Vice President, Carnegie Academy for the Advancement of Teaching) and Caroline Kreber (University of Edinburgh, UK). IJ-SoTL emphasizes that effective teaching is measured by the qualilty and depth of student learning, that it is serious intellectual work that requires sustained and complex work, that it can be opened for conversations and collaborations among colleagues, and that it can be evidence-based through pedagogical research. IJ-SoTL has the vision of being the premier international SoTL journal by being an advocate, agent and crucible for international conversations, contacts and work on SoTL

The International Journal of Instructional Media (IJIM) is the source of cutting edge research and commentary on all forms of instructional media used in instruction and training today. IJIM bridges the gap between theory and practice. The present growth in educational technology confronts you, the instructor, with a vast array of instructional media without clearly defined guidelines as to their optimal use. Primarily, IJIM is concerned with the problem of applying the various distant learning strategies and instructional media to the learning process. Articles discuss specific applications and techniques for bringing the advantages of a particular instructional medium to bear on a complete curriculum system or program.

The Internet and Higher Education – is a quarterly journal designed to reach those faculty, staff, and administrators charged with the responsibility of enhancing instructional practices and productivity via the use of Information Technology (IT) and the Internet. The editors invite scholars and researchers to submit high quality article contributions that develop theory as well as improve practice in online learning environments, distance education, Internet technology, computer-mediated learning, Internet technology, innovative instructional practices, information technology planning, and the design and evaluation of online learning environments, among many other topics. See Aims and Scope for more detail about background covered in the journal.

Interpersonal Computing and Technology Journal (IPCT-J) is a scholarly, peer-reviewed journal, published two/four times a year. The journal’s focus is on computer-mediated communication, and the pedagogical issues surrounding the use of computers and technology in educational settings.

JGE: The Journal of General Education For faculty, administrators, and policymakers, JGE is the professional forum for discussing issues in general education today. JGE addresses the general education concerns of community colleges, four-year colleges, universities, and state systems. Along with perceptive essays on the role of general education today, JGE features articles on: 1) Innovative methods in teaching and assessment; 2) Profiles of exemplary general education programs; 3) Case studies of successful curriculum development efforts; 4) Reviews of books and monographs related to general education

JOLT – the Journal of Online Learning and Teaching – The MERLOT Journal of Online Learning and Teaching (JOLT) is a peer-reviewed, online publication addressing the scholarly use of multimedia resources in education. JOLT welcomes papers on all aspects of the use of multimedia educational resources for learning and teaching. A variety of manuscript types are being sought, including research papers, theoretical/conceptual papers, position papers, case studies, and instructional design notes. For more information and to view the Guidelines for Authors , go to the site. If you have an article ‘in the making,’ contact Tracy Penny Light or Ed Perry to learn how to publish in JOLT at: tracy@temagami.uwaterloo.ca or eperry@memphis.edu . They also welcome new reviewers for the Journal.

Journal Of Asynchronous Learning Networks . The aim of the journal of asynchronous learning networks is to describe original work in asynchronous learning networks (aln), including experimental results. Our mission is to provide practitioners in online education with knowledge about the very best research in online learning. Papers emphasizing results, backed by data are the norm. Occasionally, papers reviewing broad areas are published, including critical reviews of thematic areas. Entire issues are published from time-to-time around single topic or disciplinary areas. The journal adheres to traditional standards of review and authors are encouraged to provide quantitative data. The original objective of the journal was to establish aln as a field by publishing articles from authoritative and reliable sources. The journal is now a major resource for knowledge about online learning.

Journal of College Student Retention: Research, Theory & Practice Journal of College Student Retention: Research, Theory & Practice is a scholarly refereed quarterly journal. The Journal of College Student Retention: Research, Theory & Practice is intended to provide the educational community, federal and state governmental officials and the general public a medium to exhibit and explore the complex issue of student retention and attrition. The Journal will feature articles pertaining to current and new theoretical constructs and current research on student retention and attrition in higher education. In addition, the Journal will provide practitioners an avenue to highlight and disseminate current practices, programs and services, which help students persist. College and university researchers are encouraged to submit manuscripts pertinent to retention and attrition research, theory and practice. In addition manuscripts are encouraged from practitioners relative to programs and services provided to students.

Journal of Computer-Mediated Communication, The Journal of Computer-Mediated Communication (JCMC) is a web-based, peer-reviewed scholarly journal. Its focus is social science research on computer-mediated communication via the Internet, the World Wide Web, and wireless technologies. Within that general purview, the journal is broadly interdisciplinary, publishing work by scholars in communication, business, education, political science, sociology, media studies, information science, and other disciplines. Acceptable formats for submission include original research articles, meta-analyses of prior research, synthesizing literature surveys, and proposals for special issues.

Journal of Excellence in College Teaching is a publication of the University of Miami, USA, which is available online, by subscription. The Journal on Excellence in College Teaching (ISSN 1052-4800) is a peer-reviewed journal published at Miami University by and for faculty at universities and two- and four-year colleges to increase student learning through effective teaching, interest in and enthusiasm for the profession of teaching, and communication among faculty about their classroom experiences. It answers Ernest Boyer’s (1990) call for a forum to present the scholarship of teaching and learning. The Journal provides a scholarly, written forum for discussion by faculty about all areas affecting teaching and learning, and gives faculty the opportunity to share proven, innovative pedagogies and thoughtful, inspirational insights about teaching.

The Journal of Faculty Development Reporting the latest in professional development activities at the 2-year college, 4-year college, and university levels. — A highly successful stand-by that addresses concerns for your most valuable resource, PEOPLE! It is the one medium in higher education strictly addressing both the practical and theoretical aspects of the planning, design, implementation and evaluation of practices and programs leading to effective and efficient institutions and individuals. Actively seeking new authors — send for review copy and author guidelines.

The Journal of Graduate Teaching Assistant Development. Guide to the study of improved training, employment and administration of graduate teaching assistant development programs. A new publication that obviously addresses a critical need in higher education. The Journal is designed to highlight those aspects of the teaching assistantship which prepare graduate students for the multiple roles they play as assistants as well as for the multiple roles they will play as professionals upon leaving graduate school. The full range of issues involved in the administration of teaching assistantship programs are addressed. Actively seeking new authors — send for a review copy and author guidelines

Journal Of Higher Education, is the leading scholarly journal on the institution of higher education. Articles combine disciplinary methods with critical insight to investigate issues important to faculty, administrators, and program managers. Journal Of Higher Education is an independent refereed journal. Through full-length articles, commentary, and book reviews, JHE encourages creation of effective policy solutions and enhancement of professional development in all areas within the university, the four-year college, and the community college.

The Journal of Instruction Delivery Systems (JIDS) is a quarterly publication sponsored by the Society for Applied Learning Technology¨ and published by the Learning Technology Institute¨ which is devoted to the issues, problems, and applications of instructional delivery systems in education, training, and job performance. Its purpose is to inform managers, senior professionals, and developers of specific examples of applications of technology based learning systems for education, training, and job performance improvement in terms of results that can be or have been achieved. The publication is application oriented and not focused on the technical aspects of design and development. The readers should get information directly applicable to their jobs. Articles are invited that examine some phase – technology, evolution, planning, cost, learning successes and failures – of contemporary delivery systems, in line with the foregoing.

The Journal of Interactive Instruction Development is professional quarterly devoted to enhancing the quality, effectiveness, and productivity of interactive systems design. The JIID is intended to be a practical publication. It will showcase successful programs and, where appropriate, provide information about efforts that were not successful. The JIID strives to be instructive without being academic, precise without being pedantic, and thorough without being boring.

The Journal of Student Centered Learning: Encouraging college and university faculty in the search for ways to focus on learning that is student centered versus teacher centered. What differentiates this journal from others is its focus on students as active, involved learners versus focusing on teachers and teaching styles.Teachers who embrace student centered learning (SCL) encourage students to: take responsibility for their own learning, involve students directly in the discovery of knowledge, use materials that challenge students to use their prior knowledge to create new and deeper understandings of concepts, embrace the concept that learning is enhanced through social activities such as cooperative learning, problem based learning, etc., use school, work, home, and community as resources for collaborative learning, involve all constituents in contributing to student learning (faculty, students, staff, alumni, employers, family, and others), use activities beyond the classroom to enhance the learning experience.

The Journal of Technology Education provides a forum for scholarly discussion on topics relating to technology education. Manuscripts should focus on technology education research, philosophy, and theory. In addition, the Journal publishes book reviews, editorials, guest articles, comprehensive literature reviews, and reactions to previously published articles.

The Journal on Excellence in College Teaching (ISSN 1052-4800) is a peer-reviewed journal published at Miami University by and for faculty at universities and two- and four-year colleges to increase student learning through effective teaching, interest in and enthusiasm for the profession of teaching, and communication among faculty about their classroom experiences. It answers Ernest Boyer’s (1990) call for a forum to present the scholarship of teaching and learning. The Journal provides a scholarly, written forum for discussion by faculty about all areas affecting teaching and learning, and gives faculty the opportunity to share proven, innovative pedagogies and thoughtful, inspirational insights about teaching. Manuscripts are solicited for publication in the Journal on Excellence in College Teaching, a peer-reviewed journal published by and for faculty at universities and two- and four-year colleges to increase student learning through effective teaching, interest in and enthusiasm for the profession of teaching, and communication among faculty about their classroom experiences. The Journal provides a scholarly, written forum for discussion by faculty about all areas affecting teaching and learning, and gives faculty the opportunity to share proven, innovative pedagogies and thoughtful, inspirational insights about teaching.

The Kentucky Journal of Excellence in College Teaching and Learning.The Kentucky Council on Postsecondary Education (CPE), a statewide, public oversight body for higher education, has established a new teaching and learning journal called “The Kentucky Journal of Excellence in College Teaching and Learning” (KyJECT&L for a short nickname).

Language Learning & Technology Language Learning & Technology is a fullyrefereed journal with an editorial board of scholars in the fields of second language acquisition and computer-assisted language learning. The focus of the publication is not technology per se, but rather issues related to language learning and language teaching, and how they are affected or enhanced by the use of technologies. Language Learning & Technology is published exclusively on the World Wide Web. In this way, the journal seeks to (a) reach a broad audience in a timely manner, (b) provide a multimedia format which can more fully illustrate the technologies under discussion, and (c) provide hypermedia links to related background information

Liberal Education of the Association of American Colleges and Universities expresses the voices of educators, faculty and administrators in colleges and universities nationwide who are working to enrich liberal learning and undergraduate education. AAC&U’s award-winning journal is the national forum about liberal education – a forum addressing teaching and learning, leadership, faculty innovation, and institutional change all in the service of improving undergraduate education.

MountainRise is an open, peer-reviewed, international electronic journal published twice a year by the Coulter Faculty Center for Excellence in Teaching & Learning at Western Carolina University for the purpose of being an international vehicle for the Scholarship of Teaching & Learning (SoTL).

The National Teaching and Learning Forum on-line edition of a subscription journal. Articles may address any aspect of the topic, and may be discipline-specific or general in nature. However, it’s important to keep a diverse readership in mind, since faculty from all disciplines and in all 50 states (and a growing international audience) now read The National Teaching and Learning Forum

New Directions for Teaching and Learning. New Directions for Teaching and Learning continues to offer a comprehensive range of ideas and techniques for improving college teaching based on the experience of seasoned instructors and on the latest findings of educational and psychological researchers.

On Campus with Women (OCWW), sponsored by AAC&U’s Program on the Status and Education of Women, provides readers with the most up-to-date information on women in higher education. It focuses on women’s leadership, the campus climate, curriculum and pedagogy, and new research and data on women. The Fall 2002 issue is our inaugural Online issue; prior to that time OCWW was published in print format.

Peer Review, of the Association of American Colleges and Universities provides a quarterly briefing on emerging trends and key debates in undergraduate education. Each issue is focused on a specific topic, provides comprehensive analysis, and features campus perspectives.

Practical Assessment, Research and Evaluation (PARE) is an on-line journal supported, in part, by the Department of Measurement, Statistics, and Evaluation at the University of Maryland, College Park. Its purpose is to provide education professionals access to refereed articles that can have a positive impact on assessment, research, evaluation, and teaching practice, especially at the local education agency (LEA) level.

Review of Educational Research (RER) publishes critical, integrative reviews of research literature bearing on education. Such reviews should include conceptualizations, interpretations, and syntheses of literature and scholarly work in a field. RER encourages the submission of research relevant to education from any discipline, such as reviews of research in psychology, sociology, history, philosophy, political science, economics, computer science, statistics, anthropology, and biology, provided that the review bears on educational issues.

Science, Technology & Human Values is a peer-reviewed, international, interdisciplinary journal containing research, analyses and commentary on the development and dynamics of science and technology, including their relationship to politics, society and culture. The journal provides you with work from scholars in a diverse range of disciplines across the social sciences. Among the disciplines you will find in Science, Technology & Human Values are: Philosophy, Political Science, Sociology, Environmental Studies, Anthropology, Literature, History, and Economics.

T.H.E. Journal welcomes submissions of articles from educators involved in integrating technology on their campuses and into their curricula. Articles (2,000 – 4,000 words) may describe effective administrative or instructional projects with a local, regional, statewide, national or international scope. Features should address the issue’s cover theme and follow our Editorial Guidelines.

To Improve the Academy: Resources for Student Faculty and Institutional Development is an annual collection of essays, brief research reports, and descriptions of exemplary programs or practices that is published by the Professional and Organizational Development Network in Higher Education (POD). While the content and themes vary from year to year, the number of excellent contributions has been a constant. Anyone interested in the issues related to instructional, faculty, and organizational development may submit manuscripts. Typically, manuscripts are submitted to the current editor(s) in December of each year and sent through a blind review process. The journal is distributed to members in October.


Discipline-Specific Journals

Accounting

Anthropology

Art

Behavioral Science

Biology

Business

Business Education

Business, International

Chemistry

Communications/Speech

Computer Science

Dance

Economics

Education

Educational Psychology

English

Finance

Geography

Geology

History

Journalism/Mass Communication

Management

Marketing

Mathematics

Modern Languages

Music

Nursing

Philosophy

Physical Education

Physics

Political Science

  • Political Science Teacher
  • Teaching Political Science

Psychology

Science

Social Studies

Sociology

Statistics

Theater

Women’s Education

List compiled by Dr. Sallie M. Ives, UNC Charlotte