GLOBAL JOURNAL OF
Community Psychology Practice
PROMOTING COMMUNITY PRACTICE FOR SOCIAL BENEFIT
An Exchange of Ideas, Information and Resources for
Community Practitioners Volume 1 Issue 3 2011
on this site
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Vol 1 Issue 3 2011Issue HomepageArticles Interviews Photos/Videos Tools Reviews Resources contact infoVincent T Francisco, PhDAssociate Professor, Public Health Education The Univ. of North Carolina at Greensboro Voice: 336.334.5520, Fax: 336.334.3238 editor@gjcpp.org |
CES4Health.info: A mechanism for peer-reviewed publication of innovative products of community-engaged scholarship
By Cathy Jordan (Editor, CES4Health.info; Associate Professor of
Pediatrics; and Director, Children, Youth and Family Consortium, University
of Minnesota, Minneapolis MN)
CES4Health.info, celebrating its first anniversary in November 2010, is an
online mechanism for rigorous peer-reviewed publication and dissemination of innovative
products of community-engaged scholarship (CES) that are in forms other than
journal manuscripts. CES4Health.info focuses on products related, broadly
speaking, to health. Topics may include physical or mental health, community
health, social determinants of health (such as education, housing,
environmental hazards, poverty), health sciences, or health professions and
workforce issues. Broadening the reach of peer-reviewed, cutting-edge CES to
diverse audiences that can then apply that knowledge or tool, is a critical
link in improving community health.
Journal articles are an important communication mechanism to reach
academic audiences. However, they are inappropriate and insufficient venues
for broadly disseminating more practical tools intended for varied audiences,
including community organizations, activists, diverse communities,
policymakers, philanthropy organizations, faith communities, instructors and
researchers who seek high quality, free resources to address health issues.
As a result of scholarly and genuinely collaborative and reciprocal research,
educational, programmatic, policy and other types of efforts, academic and
community partners often produce products such as documentaries, online
tools, curricula, training manuals, videos, guidelines, websites, and policy
briefs.
Because CES products that are in new media or other non-conventional
formats are usually not peer-reviewed, published or widely distributed, they
may be perceived by faculty review or promotion and tenure committees as
being of less significance, quality, credibility and value than peer-reviewed
journal articles. Further, as a result of a lack of dissemination outlets,
the impact of these forms of CES is often limited beyond the community within
which the work was conducted or produced.
CES4Health.info fills an important gap. CES4Health.info was created to
enhance the impact of and encourage the recognition of the wide range of
scholarly work that is conducted in partnership with communities. The seed
for CES4Health.info was planted by the WK Kellogg Foundation-funded
Commission on Community-Engaged Scholarship in the Health Professions, which
recommended in its 2005 report, "Linking Scholarship and
Communities," that such a mechanism be established.
Peer review through CES4Health.info mirrors conventional peer review
processes used in academic journals, with a few important innovations. A
product peer-reviewed and published through CES4Health.info is comparable to
an article published through a peer-reviewed print journal. CES4Health.info
maintains an editorial staff and follows a rigorous peer review process based
on accepted standards of scholarship. However, eight review criteria are
specifically and concretely articulated in a quantitative and qualitative
reviewer rating form. Another distinctive feature of this process is that
every product submitted to CES4Health.info is reviewed by both community and
academic reviewers. Faculty members who author products that are published
through CES4Health.info can note them in the peer-reviewed publications
section of their curriculum vitae and describe them as peer-reviewed
scholarly products. CES4Health.info also provides authors with a measure of
impact by tracking how often each product is accessed or downloaded. Evaluation
of CES4Health.info includes solicitation of feedback from users of the site,
including impressions of utility and quality of the products downloaded. This
information will be communicated to authors.
A variety of products are available through CES4Health.info. Three
examples illustrate the diversity of topics and product formats represented.
“Developing and Sustaining Community-Based Participatory Research
Partnerships: A Skill-Building Curriculum” (The Examining
Community-Institutional Partnerships for Prevention Research Group) is an
evidence-based online curriculum designed as a tool for use by
community-institutional partnerships that are using or planning to use a CBPR
approach to improving health. “Toolkit to Establish and Sustain Year-Long
Walking in Rural Communities” (Anna Zendell, Mary Riley-Jacome) is a document
created to provide guidance for rural communities to create year-long walking
programs that address safety, motivation, and sustainment. The Toolkit
consists of a Walking Program Guidebook, a Walking Club Leader Manual, and a
Survey that was created to evaluate efficacy of the program. “In Harmony:
Reflections, Thoughts, and Hopes of Central City, New Orleans” (Caricia
Catalani et al.) is a community-based participatory film produced using
videovoice methodology to document a community assessment identifying
concerns about the health impacts of the built environment in post-Katrina
New Orleans, including housing, education, and employment.
We encourage readers of the Global Journal to submit their CES products
for peer review. We are also seeking peer reviewers from community and
academic settings with diverse areas of expertise. Instructions for
submitting a product and applying to be a reviewer are available at http://www.CES4Health.info/. To
receive regular email updates about CES4Health.info, including periodic theme
“calls for products”, sign up for Community-Campus Partnerships for Health’s
monthly E-News at http://www.ccph.info/.
Acknowledgments:
CES4Health.info is a component of Community-Campus Partnerships for Health’s
(CCPH) “Faculty for the Engaged Campus” project, funded by the US Department
of Education’s Fund for the Improvement of Post-secondary Education. Faculty
for the Engaged Campus aims to strengthen community-engaged career paths in
the academy. CCPH is a non-profit membership organization that promotes
health (broadly defined) through partnerships between communities and higher
educational institutions. To become a member of CCPH, visit http://www.ccph.info/.
Author
Cathy Jordan
Cathy Jordan is the Editor of CES4Health.info; an Associate Professor of
Pediatrics; and Director of the Children, Youth and Family Consortium at the
University of Minnesota in Minneapolis MN.
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“It is necessary to reverse the common opinion and acknowledge that it is not the harshness of a situation or the sufferings it imposes that lead people to conceive of another state of affairs in which things would be better for everybody. It is on the day that we are able to conceive of another state of affairs, that a new light is cast on our trouble and our suffering and we decide that they are unbearable.” (Sartre, 1957)
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