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Presenters’ names & institutions 2012 NACADA Regional Conferences Writing for NACADA NACADA Journal Academic Advising Today Clearinghouse

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Writing-for-nacada NACADA Region 4 Miami 2012

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Page 1: Writing-for-nacada

Presenters’ names & institutions 2012 NACADA Regional Conferences

Writing for NACADANACADA Journal

Academic Advising TodayClearinghouse

Page 2: Writing-for-nacada

NACADA Publications

• The NACADA Journal

• Academic Advising Today

• NACADA Clearinghouse of Academic Advising Resources

• Monographs, books, CDs, DVD

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Presentation Topics

• Purpose• Content• Writing Guidelines• Acceptance Process

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A professional publication of NACADA

Includes: Scholarly Articles on

ResearchTheoryPractice

Book ReviewsBibliographic Annotations

Exists to advance scholarly discourse about the research, theory, and practice of academic advising in higher education.

Published biannually

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NACADA Journal -- writing guidelines

• Manuscripts should not exceed 6,000 words (excluding title page, abstract, and references)

• Most studies are based on a standard qualitative or quantitative research methodology

• NJ and APA style guides– http://www.nacada.ksu.edu/journal/journal_guidelines.htm– Publication Manual of the American Psychological Association,

Sixth Edition

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NACADA Journal – recent titles

• Expanding Research in Academic Advising: Methodological Strategies to Engage Advisors in Research

• The Professionalization of Academic Advising: Where Are We in 2010?

• Patterns of Persistence in Intended College Major with a Focus on STEM Majors

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NACADA Journal acceptance process

• Co-Editors read each manuscript and decide if a blind copy should go to Manuscript Reviewers

• Three Manuscript Reviewers from the Editorial Board read article and write an independent review

• Co-Editors read reviews and re-read manuscript• Co-Editors write an Editorial Decision Letter

– Accept, Revise study/manuscript, Reject

• Process takes two to four months• Approximately 30% of manuscripts are published

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How do I get an article published in the NACADA Journal?

• Formulate an idea– Professional reading, colleague discussion, glean from practice

• Conduct an inquiry– Qualitative and/or quantitative research; theoretical; applied

• Write it up: Prepare a manuscript that follows– http://www.nacada.ksu.edu/journal/journal_guidelines.htm– Publication Manual of the American Psychological Association,

Sixth Edition

• Send it in– Email manuscript as an attachment to: [email protected]

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How do I get an article published in the NACADA Journal?

• Become familiar with the NACADA Journal– Types of articles– Tone and style of writing

• Place your article in the context of previous NJ publications on your topic

• Proofread to assure you are really finished• Follow the NACADA Journal’s submission process

and published guidelines• Then follow the APA Style Guide (no hybrid styles)• Learn from the review process

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How long does the review process take?

• The review of a manuscript normally takes from two to four months

• Once accepted, manuscripts are published on a rolling basis twice a year: Spring and Fall

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Writing a Book Review for the NACADA Journal

• See guidelines and other information about book reviews at – http://www.nacada.ksu.edu/Journal/broverview.htm

• List of available books• Choosing and requesting a book• Writing the review• Submitting the review• Index of print-based book reviews• Web published book reviews

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Academic Advising Today -- purpose

• Academic Advising Today is NACADA’s quarterly electronic publication

• http://www.nacada.ksu.edu/AAT/index.htm• AAT is a venue where academic advisors and

advising administrators share their experiences; discuss their ideas about the theory and practice of academic advising.

• Includes: from the President, from the Executive Director, Keynote speakers, member articles, Vantage Point, Sparklers

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Academic Advising Today--content• AAT welcomes member articles and opinion pieces

directed to practicing advisors and advising administrators. • Article authors should write an article that is:

– balanced in perspective– educational in nature– positive in tone– focused on a particular aspect of academic advising.

• Commercial messages and promotions are not accepted; submissions must be both product- and vendor-neutral.

• Articles printed elsewhere cannot be reprinted in AAT without written permission from the original publication.

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Academic Advising Today writing guidelines

• ~1000 words not counting reference citations. • Devote the majority of the article to providing details that

illustrate how an aspect of advising is useful. • What implications does your article have for advising

practice? • Write in the 3rd person (advisors should…) or 1st person

(we should…). Do NOT write in 2nd person (you should…). • Use the Publication Manual of the American Psychological

Association, 6th edition • Identify yourself by name, department, institution (include

location, if appropriate), and e-mail address.

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Academic Advising Today Recent article titles

• Effective Ways to Deal with Large Advising Loads • Apathy's Antidote: Using Mindfulness to Improve Advisor Performance • You, Me, and Mom Makes Three: How Academic Advisors Can Capitalize on

Parental Involvement• The Importance of Face-to-Face Contact Between Faculty and Students: UK

Example of Pro-active Personal Tutoring• Change Leaders: A Call to Action• Nine Steps to a Successful Campus Professional Development Event• Recognize, Realize, and Utilize New Advisors and their Unique Skills• How Technology Complements Academic Advising to Impact Student

Success• Helping Students Help Themselves: Advising as Empowerment

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Academic Advising Today acceptance process

• Submit your article via e-mail to [email protected]• Identify yourself by name, department, institution (and

location, if appropriate), and e-mail address. • Juried (not blind) review• Acceptance rate ~ 60%• Articles are edited to meet AAT and APA guidelines• Copyright release required• Most articles printed within 3-6 months

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How do I get an article published in Academic Advising Today?

• Have an idea– Professional reading, colleague discussion,

practice

• Discuss the idea with Leigh Cunningham, AAT Managing Editor [email protected]

• Write it out • Send it in

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NACADA Clearinghouse of Academic Advising Resources

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NACADA Clearinghouse of Academic Advising Resources purpose

Promote the advancement of academic advising by providing members with electronic access to:

• Advising Issues & Resources – Resource links to Web sites – Topic overview – Annotated bibliography

• Advising Standards & Values include links to recognized definitions, standards and values of advising.

• Member Produced Web Publications suggested by NACADA members as useful.

• http://www.nacada.ksu.edu/Resources/index.htm

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The Clearinghouse – content of the publication arm of the Clearinghouse

– Topic overview written by a member knowledgeable about the issue addressed that will explain and improve practice

– Annotated bibliography of articles and/or books where advisors can "read more about" the topic

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The Clearinghouse -- writing guidelines

• Juried publication • Overview of a 'Critical Issue' within advising• Article can be read in 5-10 minutes ~ 1600 words• Written in 3rd person • Includes annotated bibliography of ~ 10 resources

to “read more about it” • APA format• Copyright release

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The Clearinghouse Recent Articles

• The Puzzle of College Students Success: Fitting the Counseling and Advising Pieces Together

• How to organize a common reading on your campus

• Crafting a personal advising philosophy • Restructuring our conversations: Shifting to four dimensional

advising models• Is the Canadian Advising System Really Different from the

American Advising System? • "Approachable” “Intimidating” “Unprofessional” “Credible": What do

our offices say about us?

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How do I get an article published in the Clearinghouse?

• Have an idea– Professional reading, colleague discussion, practice

• Check the Clearinghouse at http://www.nacada.ksu.edu/Clearinghouse/AdvisingIssues/index.htm to see what already has been said about this issue

• Email the Clearinghouse Director at [email protected] to discuss possible article

• Write it • Submit it

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Additional NACADA Publication opportunities

• Monographs

• DVDs, CDs

• Books

• Audio files

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Additional NACADA Publication opportunities

• Editors• Chapter authors• Exemplary

Practices• Content Review

Team members• Expertise

Database

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• Submissions should be:• About an advising/student success related NACADA experience.• Educational in nature, positive in tone, and focused on particular aspects

of academic advising.• Original and written especially for the NACADA blog.• Both product- and vendor-neutral.• Non-political

• Writing Guidelines• Keep posts to the point, roughly 250-400 words in a Word file.• Use the first person singular. Writing in a conversational tone engages

readers and we like hearing personal stories.• When possible, include at least one image in your post. contact

[email protected]• Try to utilize a bulleted format and urls when appropriate (be sure to state

where user is going with url).

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Summary/Quiz

• Where would you send a scholarly article based on formal inquiry?

• Where would you send an article about advising that is based on your own experience and observation?

• Where would you send your department’s advising handbook to share with others?

• Where would you send an idea you have for improving practice?

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Questions

• Thank you for

attending

• Please fill out the

session evaluation