Hi, Ray and other dear teachers.  I don't know about ESU, but our reference 
librarian at Willamette had a great routine that she'll tailor for any class 
giving them a rundown on scholarly sources and resources the library has.  
In it, she shows them the differences between magazines and journals.  I 
would recommend trying that before limiting their choices to journals that 
may or may not have what they're looking for.  Just my $0.02.  As always, A.

<html><DIV>D. Angus Vail <BR>Associate Professor of Sociology <BR>Willamette 
University <BR>900 State Street <BR>Salem, OR 97301 <BR>Phone: 503.370.6313 
<BR>Fax: 503.370.6512 <BR><BR>"It's not enough to know that things work. 
<BR>The laurels go to those who can show HOW they work."</DIV></html>




>From: "Ray Muller" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>To: <[email protected]>
>Subject: TEACHSOC: List of Sociology Journals
>Date: Thu, 11 May 2006 09:19:52 -0400
>
>
>Hello Everyone,
>I have an exceedingly hard time getting my students (including senior
>sociology majors!) to understand what is (and is not) a scholarly
>sociological source acceptable for a research paper. Now I am thinking
>of simply distributing a list of "pre-approved" peer-reviewed
>sociological journals. Does anybody happen to have such a list you could
>email me per attachment?
>
>Thanks
>Ray
>
>Ray Muller, Ph.D.
>Sociology Department
>East Stroudsburg University
>570-422-3014 (phone)
>570-422-3198 (fax)
>
>
>
>
>


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