Article Types and Topics
The CATESOL Journal is the official journal of CATESOL. It is a refereed academic journal published twice a year. The CATESOL Journal is listed in Linguistics and Language Behavior Abstracts (LLBA), and the full text is available through the EBSCO’s Education Source database. Articles in The CATESOL Journal focus on theory, research, pedagogy, and educational policy related to the teaching of English to speakers of other languages, including US-born bilinguals, Generation 1.5 students, immigrants, and international students. Articles may focus on any educational level, from kindergarten to university, as well as on adult school and workplace literacy settings.
Submission is open to all; authors do not need to be members of the CATESOL organization to submit a manuscript, but priority is given to California authors. Additional information regarding submission types and topics is listed below:
Articles focusing on pedagogical practices, programs, policy, and perspectives (up to 20 double-spaced pages including references and appendices):
· Based on current or emergent trends in the field of TESOL, exchanges present
a) well-argued viewpoints regarding theory, research, pedagogy, and/or educational policy;
b) effective instructional techniques and classroom practices;
c) analyses of approaches for specific student populations;
d) curricular changes;
e) pilot studies, or
f) other discussions that are of interest to our readership.
· These articles should go beyond restating others’ ideas to presenting original interpretations, reinterpretations, insights, or applications.
Empirical or bibliographic research articles (up to 30 pages, double-spaced pages including references and appendices):
· Research-based articles should be driven by pedagogical problems and research questions that address those problems.
· We encourage the submission of classroom-based and reflective teaching research.
· These articles should
a) show evidence of rigorous scholarship,
b) make an original contribution to the field of education,
c) contain ample references, and
d) provide readers with insights that they can generalize to their own educational settings.
· We welcome both qualitative and quantitative research.
a)
We ask authors to keep
the literature review and methods sections succinct and instead emphasize the
findings and the
applications of those findings to pedagogical issues.
b)
Articles that contain
statistical analysis must be written in such a way that a general audience of
educators (not just
statisticians) understand the methods and
findings.
c)
Quantitative research
articles should foreground findings rather than the tables of statistical data
used to reach those
findings. We recommend placing large statistical tables in
the appendices.
Reviews of books and other published materials (up to 4 pages):
· Review guidelines can be found at https://escholarship.org/uc/catesoljournal/reviewGuidelines
Proposals for theme sections:
· Those interested may also submit a proposal to serve as guest editor of a theme section.
· The proposal should include
a) a cover letter explaining the rationale for the theme section;
b) a tentative list of four to six authors who have agreed to write articles for the theme section; and
c) titles and abstracts of the proposed articles.
Graduate student perspectives:
·
Articles for this theme
section, published periodically, are written by graduate students and focus on
various aspects of the
graduate experience: professional development, the
theory-to-practice connection, identity and socialization into the field, and
so on.
·
Articles are edited and
specific themes for each Graduate Student Perspectives section are chosen in
collaboration with the
graduate student representative(s) on the CATESOL
Board.
·
When applicable, a
specific call for submissions is listed on the CATESOL Journal webpage
“Graduate Student Theme Section”
well in advance
of the manuscript deadline.
For general information about The CATESOL Journal and information about submitting articles and proposals, please contact the editorial team:
Robert Kohls (Email: rkohls@sfsu.edu) Rebekah Sidman Taveau (rebekahsidmantave@my.smccd.edu) Kevin Wong (kevin.wong@pepperdine.edu)
For information about submitting book reviews, see www.catesoljournal.org/review-guidelines or please contact:
Robert Kohls, The CATESOL Journal Book Review Editor
Email: rkohls@sfsu.edu
If you have any questions, please feel free to contact the editors at any time.