One more thought concerning using sociology journal articles as a way of 
challenging students to have a better grasp of sociology as an academic 
discipline.

I make a point of asking students to read both quantitative as well as 
qualitative articles about the same topic, with the goal of encouraging them 
to see the variety of ways in which we study the social world.

Have a good weekend, everyone!

Anne F. Eisenberg
Assistant Professor
Department of Sociology
SUNY-Geneseo
123D Sturges Hall
Geneseo, NY  14454
716-245-5447 (office)
716-245-5337 (fax)
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Michael Johnston" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[email protected]>
Sent: Thursday, May 11, 2006 12:16 PM
Subject: TEACHSOC: Re: List of Sociology Journals



Hi, Ray,

There is a ranking of sociology journals by their importance (the
"IMPACT" factor is basically a count of how often articles from a
journal are cited by the scientific community).  The ranking is
available through the Web of Science website.  The IMPACT factor is
considered legitimate by a very wide variety of disciplines, especially
the scientific ones where information can be used as part of the tenure
review process.

Reference librarians should be able to help you access the IMPACT
factors for journals classified as belonging to the discipline of
sociology through the web in a few minutes.  Once you see the point and
click process specific to your institution, it is a breeze to replicate.
Right now, there are about 90 journals ranked.  The list of ranked
journals could be pitched as a very objective "list of "pre-approved"
peer-reviewed sociological journals."

By the way, I checked this list last week for a friend and found out
that the four sociology journals with the top IMPACT scores were, in
order:
1. American Sociological Review
2. Annual Review of Sociology
3. American Journal of Sociology
4. Social Problems

Thanks for your post - I'm reading the responses with much interest.

Best wishes,
Michael





-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On
Behalf Of Ray Muller
Sent: Thursday, May 11, 2006 6:20 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: TEACHSOC: List of Sociology Journals


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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