#261
Date:         Thu, 1 Sep 1994 08:48:29 -0600
From:         "Mark J. Kittleson" 

Just a brief memo to let you know the status of the descriptors
of the individuals listed in the directory.  For the month of September,
those individuals who are full-time staff, and reside in states that
begin with the letters A through K, send three short descriptors of
your areas of interest.

The directory keeps growing, thanks to many of you.  Keep up the
good work.

_____________________________________________________

Mark J. Kittleson, Ph.D., ga3748@siucvmb.siu.edu
Southern Illinois University
Founder and Owner of the International E-Mail Directory
and the HEDIR listserv

"The best defense is a strong offense, and I
intend to start offending right now."
===========================================================
==============
#262
Date:         Thu, 1 Sep 1994 08:48:33 -0600
From:         "Mark J. Kittleson" 

September 1, 1994

                            THE INTERNATIONAL
                      ELECTRONIC MAIL DIRECTORY FOR
                            HEALTH EDUCATORS

                             Founded and Operated by:

            Mark J. Kittleson, Ph.D. (GA3748@SIUCVMB.SIU.EDU)
                      Southern Illinois University
                    LISTSERV:  HEDIR@SIUCVMB.SIU.EDU


ALABAMA

UNIVERSITY OF ALABAMA AT BIRMINGHAM
UAB Station
Birmingham, AL. 35294
FAX: (205) 934-4963 Phone:  (205) 934-5363

Clint Bruess, edu5027@uabdpo.dpo.uab.edu
     
school health;  sexuality;  administrationY
David Macrina, edu5042@uabdpo.dpo.uab.edu
     
community health;  school health;  health behaviorY

THE UNIVERSITY OF ALABAMA
Box 870312
Tuscaloosa, AL 35487
FAX: (205) 348-6873      Phone:  (205) 348-2956

James Eddy, jeddy3@ua1vm.ua.edu
Carl Westerfield, cwesterf@ua1vm.ua.edu
Minqi Wang,  mwang@ua1vm.ua.edu
Steve Nagy,  snagy@ua1vm.ua.edu

Doctoral Students:

Debra Huggins Schade, dschade3@ua1vm.ua.edu
Joan Cowdery, jcowder3@ua1vm.ua.edu
Gene Fitzhugh, gfitzhu3@ua1vm.ua.edu

ARIZONA

ARIZONA STATE UNIVERSITY
Student Health
Health Education and Wellness
Box 872104
Tempe, Arizona 85287-2104
FAX: (602) 965-8914 Phone:(602) 965-4721

Anne Raynor, idaer@asuvm.inre.asu.edu
     
HIV/AIDS;  sexuality;  peer educationY

MAYO CLINIC SCOTTSDALE
13400 East Shea Blvd.
Scottsdale, Arizona  85259
Fax:  (602) 301-7006     Phone:  (602) 301-8138

Renae Cunnien, mra7700%rocvm@mrp.mayo.edu
     
patient education;  women's health;  preventive careY

UNIVERSITY OF ARIZONA
Health Promotion & Preventative Services
Student Health Services
Tucson, Arizona  85721
FAX: (602) 621-8325 Phone: (602) 621-4251

Koreen Johannessen, kjohanne@well.health.arizona.edu
     
eating disorders prevention;  standards for college health;
     alcohol/drug prevention strategiesY
Leeann Hamilton, lhamilto@well.health.arizona.edu
     
HIV/AIDS, sexuality, preventionY

ARKANSAS

THE UNIVERSITY OF ARKANSAS
HPER Building
326 A Health Projects Office
Fayetteville, AR  72701
FAX:  (501) 575-6401     Phone:  (501) 575-5639

Bryan Williams,   bwilliam@uafsysb.uark.edu
Chester Jones, csjones3@ua1vm.ua.edu
  
injury control/prevention;  adolescent health;  software developmentY

Doctoral Students:
Mark Kelley, rkelley@uafsysb.uark.edu
Raffy R. Luquis, rluquis@uafsysb.uark.edu
Caile Spear, cspear@comp.uark.edu
Kieran Fogarty, kfogarty@uafsysb.uark.edu

AUSTRALIA

CURTIN UNIVERSITY
Department of Health Promotion
School of Public Health
GPO Box U1987
Perth, West Australia  6001
FAX: 0011-61-9-351-2958  Phone:  0011-61-9-351-7997

Peter Howat, phowat@health.curtin.edu.au

DEAKIN UNIVERSITY
Food and Nutrition Program
P.O. Box 356
Carlton South
Victoria  3053
FAX:  61 0(3) 662 1876   Phone: 61 (0)3 660 6800

Colin Sindall, sindall@deakin.edu.au
     
organizational change;  workplace health promotion;
     public health nutritionY

CALIFORNIA

CALIFORNIA STATE UNIVERSITY, CHICO
Department of Health and Community Services
Chico, California  95929-0505
FAX:  (916) 898-6824     Phone:  (916) 898-6661

Diana Flannery,  dflannery@oavax.csuchico.edu

CALIFORNIA STATE UNIVERSITY, FRESNO
Health and Counseling Center
Fresno, California  93740-0081
FAX:  (209) 278-6702     Phone:  (209) 278-6735

Sam Gitchel, sam_gitchel@csufresno.edu

MARIN AIDS PROJECT
1660 2nd Street
San Rafael, CA  94901
FAX:  (415) 457-5687     Phone: (415) 457-2487

Barry Zack, barry_zack.psg@quickmail.ucsf.edu
     
HIV prevention;  incarcerated populationsY

STANFORD UNIVERSITY
Medical School
351 Richelieu Court
Los Altos, CA  90422
FAX:  (415) 725-7944     Phone:  (415) 725-8822

Manijeh Parineh, parineh@camis.stanford.edu
     
general health;  multi-mediaY

UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA AT BERKELEY
School of Public Health
Health Education Department
University of California, Berkeley
Berkeley, CA
FAX:  Not given          Phone:  not given

Caroline Wang, caroline@qal.berkeley.edu

Doctoral Students:
Bonnie M. Duran, bonduran@ocf.berkeley.edu

UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA AT LOS ANGELES
School of Public Health
10833 LeConte Avenue
Los Angeles, CA
FAX: (310) 825-8440      Phone: (310) 825-8508

Donald Morisky, morisky@others.sscnet.ucla.edu
Kevin Campbell, izv8res@mvs.oac.ucla.edu
     
minority health, cancer control, program evaluationY

UNIVERSITY OF SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA
Student Health Center
849 W. 34th Street
Los Angeles, CA  90089-0311
FAX: (213)  740-0214     Phone: (213)  740-WELL

Paula Swinford, swinford@mizar.usc.edu
     
sexuality;  HIV prevention;  administrationY

CANADA

UNIVERSITY OF BRITISH COLUMBIA
Institute of Health Promotion Research
6248 Biological Sciences Road
Vancouver, BC V6T 1Z4
FAX: (604) 822-9210 Phone: (604) 822-2258

Lawrence Green, lgreen@unixg.ubc.ca
     
software development;  policy research;  decentralization
     & community participation in health programsY
Bob Cadman,  cadman@unixg.ubc.ca
     
health promotion;  injury preventionY

UNIVERSITY OF OTTAWA
School of Nursing
451 Smyth Road
Ottawa, Ontario
Canada  K1H 8M5
FAX: (613) 787-6757 Phone: (613) 722-2242 (ext. 3445)

Nancy Edwards, nedwards@zeus.med.uottawa.ca
     
fall prevention & seniors;  postpartum smoking relapse;
     multiculturalY

UNIVERSITY OF SASKATCHEWAN
Health Care Administration Programme
Commerce Building
Saskatoon, Saskatchewan
Canada  S7N 0W0
FAX: (306) 966-8709 Phone: (306) 966-8435

Allen M. Backman, backman@sask.usask.ca, or
backman@herald.usask.ca

COLORADO

CENTERS FOR DISEASE CONTROL AND PREVENTION
Public Health Education Specialist
P.O. Box 2087
Division of Vector-Borne Diseases
Ft. Collins, CO 80525
FAX: (303) 221-6476 Phone:  (303) 221-6429

James Herrington,   jxh7@cidvbi1.em.cdc.gov
     
behavioral epidemiology;  program planning;  evaluationY

UNIVERSITY OF NORTHERN COLORADO
Department of Health and Nutrition
Boulder, CO
FAX: (303) 351-1489 Phone: (303) 351-1517 or 351-1617

James Robinson, jrobinso@goldng8.univnorthco.edu

FINLAND

THE UNIVERSITY OF TURKU
Department of Public Health
Lemminkaisenkatu 1
20520 Turku, Finland
FAX:  358-21-633-8439    Phone:  358-21-633-8513

Ansa Ojanlatva,   ansa.ojanlatva@sara.cc.utu.fi
     
sexuality;  evaluation;  administrationY

FLORIDA

FLORIDA ATLANTIC UNIVERSITY
Department of Exercise Science/Wellness Education
P.O. Box 3091
Boca Raton, FL  33431-0991
FAX: (407) 367-3030 Phone: (407) 367-3794

Steve Bridges, bridgess@acc.fau.edu
     
tumor biology;  exercise immunology;  public health policyY

UNIVERSITY OF FLORIDA
College of Health and Human Performance
Dept. of Health Science Education
4 FGL
Gainesville, FL. 32611
FAX:  (904) 392-3186     Phone: (904) 392-0583

Steve M. Dorman,    sdorman@hhp.ufl.edu
Robert Weiler,   rweiler@hhp.ufl.edu

UNIVERSITY OF WEST FLORIDA
Department of HLS
11000 University Parkway
Pensacola, FL  32514
FAX:  (904) 474-3342     Phone:  (904) 474-2592

Brian Barthel,   bbarthel@uwf
Travis Clark, tclark@uwf

FLORIDA STATE UNIVERSITY
Department of Curriculum and Instruction
209 Carothers Hall
Tallahassee, FL 32306
FAX: (904) 644-1880      Phone: (904) 644-2122

Mary S. Sutherland, msutherl@garnet.acns.fsu.edu
     
school health;  minority health;  older and intergenerational
     American health promotionY

GEORGIA

ARTHRITIS FOUNDATION - NATIONAL OFFICE
1314 Spring Street NW
Atlanta, GA 30309
FAX: (404) 872-0457 Phone: (404) 872-7100, ext. 6273

Sarah L. Gayle,  sgayle@arthritis.org
     
arthritis education & outreach,  reaching rural populations,
     special needs of older adultsY

CENTERS FOR DISEASE CONTROL & PREVENTION
Division of Chronic Disease Control and Community Intervention
Mail Stop K 45
4770 Buford Hwy. N.E.
Atlanta, GA 30341-3724
FAX: (404) 488-5964 Phone: (404) 488-5532

Brick Lancaster, bxl0@ccddcd1.em.cdc.gov
     
community health education;  worksite health promotion;
     leadership/managementY
Elizabeth H. Howze, eah6@ccddcd1.em.cdc.gov
     
physical activity;  health communication;  women's health;
     worksite healthY

GEORGIA SOUTHERN UNIVERSITY
Department of Health Science Education
Landrum Box 8075
Statesboro, GA  30460-8075
FAX: (912) 681-0721 Phone: (912) 681-5266

Joanne Chopak,   jchopak@gsvms2.cc.gasou.edu
     
adolescent sexuality issues;  women's health; school healthY
David Foulk,   dfoulk@gsvms2.cc.gasou.edu
     
AIDS;  migrant farmworkers;  needlesharingY

UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA
Dept. of Health Promotion & Behavior
Athens, GA  30602
FAX: (706) 542-4956 Phone:  (706) 542-4365

Stu Fors, stufors@uga.cc.uga.edu
     
drug use & abuse;  program planning & evaluation;
     health consumerismY

GREAT BRITAIN

THE UNIVERSITY OF LEEDS
LRF Unit
17 Springfield Mt.
Leeds, LS29NG UK
FAX:  44-532-426065 Phone:  44-532-443517

Anthony Staines, a.staines@leeds.ac.uk

HAWAII

UNIVERSITY OF HAWAII
Cancer Prevention Research Center
1236 Lauhala
Honolulu, Hawaii  96813
FAX:  (808) 586-3077     Phone: (808) 586-3076

Karen Glanz, kglanz@uhunix.uhcc.hawaii.edu

ILLINOIS

ILLINOIS STATE UNIVERSITY
Dept. of Health Sciences
106B Moulton Hall
5220 Illinois State University
Normal, IL  61790-5220
FAX: (309) 438-2450      Phone:  (309) 438-8807

Marilyn Morrow, mmorrow@ilstu.edu
Marion Micke, mmicke@ilstu.edu
Bette Keyser, bkeyser@ilstu.edu
Kelli McCormack Brown, kbrown@ilstu.edu
     
oral health;  social marketing;  community & school partnershipsY

NORTHERN ILLINOIS UNIVERSITY
Health Enhancement Services
University Health Services
Dekalb, IL  60115
FAX: (815) 753-9599 Phone:  (815) 753-9746

Steve Lux, f40sel1@mvs.cso.niu.edu

PARKLAND COLLEGE
2400 Bradley Avenue, Room X114
Champaign, IL  61821-1899
FAX:  None given         Phone:  (217) 351-2214

Regina A. Galeri-Unti, ragalerx@firefly.prairienet.org

SANGAMON STATE UNIVERSITY
Department of Health Services Administration
Springfield, IL  62794-9243
FAX:  (217)  786-7279    Phone:  (217)  786-6306

Kathy DeBarr, debarr@eagle.sangamon.edu

SOUTHERN ILLINOIS UNIVERSITY
Department of Health Education and Recreation
307 Pulliam
Carbondale, IL  62901-4632
FAX:  (618) 453-1829     Phone:  (618) 453-2777

Mark J. Kittleson,  ga3748@siucvmb.siu.edu
     
HIV knowledge among health care workers, teaching strategies,
     researchY
Regina Glover, chair  ga3097@siucvmb.siu.edu
Dale Ritzel, ga4074@siucvmb.siu.edu
     
injury control, safety, computersY
Bobbie Ogletree,  ga4119@siucvmb.siu.edu
Kathleen Welshimer, ga4055@siucvmb.siu.edu
Phyllis McCowen, ge1840@siucvmb.siu.edu
Chris Cronk, ga3689@siucvmb.siu.edu

Doctoral Students:
Kristine Brown, kbrown@siucvmb.siu.edu
George Strickland, rascal02@siucvmb.siu.edu
Chris Beyer, wcb7878@siucvmb.siu.edu
Larry Kepple, sm0690%springb@siucvmb.siu.edu
Helen Welle, gr9237@siucvmb.siu.edu
Julie Gast, gr8549@siucvmb.siu.edu
Chris Nelson, nelson@siucvmb.siu.edu
Bret Simon, gr4015@siucvmb.siu.edu
Edgar Hopkins, yongcha@siucvmb.siu.edu
Georganne Syler, gaps@siucvmb.siu.edu or c66455q@semovm.semo.edu
Anne Marietta, a3348619@siucvmb.siu.edu or c66455q@semovm.semo.edu
Theresa Hardman, thardman@siucvmb.siu.edu
Jan Rogers, ga3497@siucvmb.siu.edu

SOUTHERN ILLINOIS UNIVERSITY
School of Medicine
Carbondale, IL  62901
FAX:  none given    Phone: (618) 453-1546

W. Russ Wright, wright@qm.c-som.siu.edu

SOUTHERN ILLINOIS UNIVERSITY
College of Technical Careers
Carbondale, IL  62901
FAX:           Phone: (618) 453-8821

Elaine Vitello, Dean,  ga3831@siucvmb.siu.edu
Fred Isberner, Asso. Dean, ga2849@siucvmb.siu.edu

UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS AT U-C
Dept. of Community Health
1206 S. Fourth St.
Champaign, IL. 61820
FAX: (217) 333-0404 Phone: (217) 244-0506

R. Warrick Armstrong,  rarmstrong@uiuc.edu
Tom O'Rourke, orourke@vmd.cso.uiuc.edu
     
research, evaluation, health policyY

UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS
Cooperative Extension
4112 N. Water Tower Place
Mt. Vernon, IL  62864
FAX:  (618) 242-9433     Phone:  (618) 242-9310

Martha Winter, winterm@idea.ag.uiuc.edu

WESTERN ILLINOIS UNIVERSITY
Department of Health Sciences
Macomb, IL 61455
FAX: (309) 298-2400      Phone: (309) 298-1076

Kathy Fischer, ke-fischer@bgu.edu
Nancy P. Parsons, np-parsons@bgu.edu

INDIANA

BALL STATE UNIVERSITY
Department of Physiology and Health
Muncie, IN  47306
FAX:  (317) 285-2351     Phone: (317) 285-5961

James F. McKenzie,  00jfmckenzie@bsuvc.bsu.edu
Dale Hahn,  00dbhahn@bsuvc.bsu.edu
Dave Marini, 00dcmarini@bsuvc.bsu.edu
Wayne Payne, 00wapayne@bsuvc.bsu.edu
Jeffrey Clark,  00jkclark@bsuvc.bsu.edu
     
sexuality education;  HIV;  foundationsY
Susan Clark,  01seclark@bsuvc.bsu.edu
Marty Wood,  00mlwood@bsuvc.bsu.edu
Diana Godish,  00drgodish@bsuvc.bsu.edu
Robert R. Pinger,  00rrpinger@bsuvc.bsu.edu
Molly S. Wantz, 00mswantz@bsuvc.bsu.edu
Denise Amschler, 00dhamschler@bsuvm.bsu.edu
Dave Gobble, 00dcgobble@bsuvc.bsu.edu
     
wellness; philosophy; organizational changeY

INDIANA UNIVERSITY
Department of Applied Health Science
HPER 116
Bloomington, IN  47405
FAX:  (812) 855-3936     Phone: (812) 855-3817

Bruce Ragon,   bragon@ucs.indiana.edu
Ruth Engs,   engs@ucs.indiana.edu
Nangnoy Nakornkhet,   nnakornk@ucs.indiana.edu
David Birch, dabirch@ucs.indiana.edu

UNIVERSITY OF NOTRE DAME
Dept. of Human Resources
Notre Dame, IN  46556
FAX:  not given          Phone: (219) 631-5829

Michele Mannion, mannion.2@nd.edu

PURDUE UNIVERSITY
Department of Health Promotion and Education
106 Lambert
W. Lafayette, IN  47907
Fax: (317) 496-1239 Phone:  (317) 494-9112

David Black,  black@purccvm or black@vm.cc.purdue.edu
Marlene Tappe, tappe@purccvm

VALPARAISO UNIVERSITY
Wellness Program Office
Valparaiso, Indiana  46383
FAX: (219) 464-5381 Phone: (219) 464-5105

Carrie Higgins,   chiggins@exodus.valpo.edu

IOWA

THE UNIVERSITY OF IOWA
Office of International Education and Services,
120 International Center
Iowa City, IA  52242
Fax:  (319) 335-2021     Phone:  (319) 335-0335

John Rogers,  john-e-rogers@uiowa.edu

UNIVERSITY OF NORTHERN IOWA
Division of Health Education
413 Schindler Education Center
Cedar Falls, Iowa  50614-0241
FAX:  (319) 273-5958     Phone:  (319) 273-5806

Jerome Kotecki, kotecki@uni.edu
Alfonso Scandrett Jr. scandrett@uni.edu
Jackie Strous, strousj8660@uni.edu
Susan Kochs,  kochs@cobra.uni.edu
Dennis Cryer, cryer@uni.edu
Chris Edington, edington@uni.edu
Tom Davis, davis@uni.edu

KANSAS

UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Department of Human Development
4001 Dole Center
Lawrence, KS  66045
FAX:  (913) 864-5281     Phone:  (913) 864-0533

Vincent Francisco, frisco@kuhub.cc.ukans.edu

KENTUCKY

UNIVERSITY OF KENTUCKY
Department of Health, PE, and Recreation
100 Seaton Bldg
Lexington, KY  40506--0219
Fax: (606) 323-1090      Phone: (606) 257-5827

Melody Noland,  mnola01@ukcc.uky.edu
Richard Riggs, rsrigg01@ukcc.uky.edu

UNIVERSITY OF LOUISVILLE
Department of Health & Physical Education
Louisville, KY
FAX: (502) 852-4534 Phone:  (502) 588-5050

Cheryl Kolander, cakola01@ulkyvm.louisville.edu
Dick Fee, rafee001@ulkyvm.louisville.edu

LOUISIANA

NICHOLLS STATE UNIVERSITY
Department of Health and Physical Education
Thibodaux, LA  70310
FAX:  none given    Phone:  (504)  448-4270

Marie Zannis, zannism@cenac.nich.edu
Chris Rachal, rachalc@cenac.nich.edu

NORTHEAST LOUISIANA UNIVERSITY
Dept. of Health and Human Performance
Monroe, Louisiana  71209

Dawn M. Wilson,  pewilson@merlin.nlu.edu

SOUTHEAST LOUISIANA UNIVERSITY
Department of Kinesiology and Health Studies
P.O. Box 845-SLU
Hammond, LA 70402
FAX: (504) 549-5075 Phone: (504) 549-2130

Betty Baker, fhpe1081@selu.edu
Wynn Gillan, fhpe1763@selu.edu
Millie Naquin, fhpe2266@selu.edu

MAINE

UNIVERSITY OF MAINE, PRESQUE ISLE
Department of Education/Health & P.E.
Presque Isle, Maine  04769
FAX: (207) 764-0311 Phone:  (207) 764-0311, ext. 496

Srijana M. Bajracharya,  srijana@maine.maine.edu
Lucy Strobel,  strobel1@polaris.umpi.maine.edu

MARYLAND

UNIVERSITY OF MARYLAND
Department of Health Education
College Park, MD
FAX:  (301) 314-9167     Phone: (301) 405-2463

Glen G. Gilbert, ggilbert@umdacc.umd.edu
Robert Gold, 73002.1774@compuserve.com
Dan Luxemborg,  danlux@wam.umd.edu

Doctoral Students:
Stacey Rattner, coke@wam.umd.edu
Sue Reynolds, msuer@wam.umd.edu
Lisa Helene Helfman, lita@wam.umd.edu

MICHIGAN

NORTHERN MICHIGAN UNIVERSITY

Department of HPER, PEIF 222
1401 Presque Isle
Marquette, MI  49855-5350
FAX:  None Given            Phone:  (906)  227-1135

Harvey A. Wallace, fahw@nmumus

WESTERN MICHIGAN UNIVERSITY
4024-5 Gary Center
Department of Health, Physical Education and Recreation
Kalamazoo, MI 49008

FAX: (616) 387-2704         Phone: (616) 387-3081

Robert J. (Bob) Bensley, bensley@wmich.edu
William C. (Bill) Gross,  william.gross@wmich.edu
Mariane Frauenknecht, frauenknecht@wmich.edu

MINNESOTA

MANKATO STATE UNIVERSITY
Department of Health Science
Mankato, MN.  56001
FAX: None given     Phone:  None listed

John Romas,  rom123@vax1.mankato.msus.edu

MINNESOTA DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH
Health Promotion & Education
717 Delaware Street SE
P.O. Box 9441
Minneapolis, MN.  55440-0441
FAX:    (612) 623-5775   Phone:  (612) 623-5334

Kimberly J. Miner,  Miner@health-dad.state.mn.us
Gail Gentling, gail.gentling@health.state.mn.us
Martha Roberts, martha.roberts@health.state.mn.us

UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA
Division of Epidemiology
1300 South Second St., Suite 300
Minneapolis, MN  55454
FAX: (612) 624-0315      Phone:  (612) 626-8140

Doctoral Students:
Chris Rissel, rissel@epivax.epi.umn.edu
Michael Staufacker, staufacker@epivax.epi.umn.edu

MISSOURI

THE UNIVERSITY OF MISSOURI

Health Education Programs
103 Rothwell
University of Missouri
Columbia, MO 65211
FAX:  (314) 884-4855        Phone:  (314) 882-3482

Jim Brown, hpedjimb@mizzou1.missouri.edu
     
behavior change;  drug & sex education;  school curriculumY

NEBRASKA

UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA-LINCOLN
Department of Health and Human Performance
135 Mabel Lee Hall
Lincoln, NE 68588-0229
FAX:  (402) 472-8317        Phone: (402) 472-3882

William Murphy, Chair,  wmurphy@unlinfo.unl.edu
Ian Newman, inewman@unlinfo.unl.edu
John Scheer, jscheer@unlinfo.unl.edu
Richard Schmidt, rschmidt@unlinfo.unl.edu
Wesley Sime,  wsime@unlinfo.unl.edu

Doctoral Students:

Vicki Boye, vboye@unlinfo.unl.edu
Kris Jankovitz,   kcj@unlinfo.unl.edu

NEW JERSEY

MONTCLAIR STATE COLLEGE
Department of Health Professions
Upper Montclair, NJ  07043

Fax: (201) 655-5455 Tel:  (201) 655-7113 or 4154

Michael S. Davidson, davidson@apollo.montclair.edu

RUTGERS UNIVERSITY
Urban Studies and Community Health
B245 Lucy Stone Hall
New Brunswick, NJ  08903

FAX: (908) 932-0934         Phone:  (908) 932-4009

Joyce Morris, jjmorris@gandalf.rutgers.edu
Rick Poverny, poverny@gandalf.rutgers.edu
Fern Goodhart, goodhart@gandalf.rugers.edu
(Director of Student Health Services)

NEW MEXICO

NEW MEXICO STATE UNIVERSITY
Department of Health Science
Las Cruces, NM
FAX: (505) 646-4343 Phone: (505) 646-4300

Jeff Brandon, jbrandon@nmsuvm1.nmsu.edu
Mike Barnes, mbarnes@nmsuvm1.nmsu.edu

UNIVERSITY OF NEW MEXICO
College of Education
Alburquerque, NM  87131
FAX (505) 277-8360  Phone: (505) 277-0337

Cathie Stivers, stivers@polaris.umn.edu
Sue Forster Cox, sfcjan@triton.umn.edu
     
border health;  community health;  multicultural issuesY

NEW YORK

ADELPHI UNIVERSITY
Department of Health Education
Garden City, Long Island, NY  11530
FAX: None given     Phone:  (516) 294-8700, ext. 7587

Rose S. Beer, beer@adlibv.adelphi.edu

ALBERT EINSTEIN COLLEGE OF MEDICINE
1306 Morris Park Avenue
Bronx, NY  10461
FAX:  (718) 918-4809        Phone:  (718) 918-4804

JJ Steinberg, steinber@aecom.yu.edu
     
policy;  planningY

COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY
Healthwise Program, Health Services
519 West 114th Street
New York, New York  10027
Fax:  (212) 854-8949        Phone:  (212) 854-5453

Billie Lindsey, bl22@columbia.edu

CORNELL UNIVERSITY
Cornell AIDS Action
Gannett Health Center
Ithaca, NY  14853
FAX: (607) 255-0269   Phone:  (607) 255-4782

Sharon J. Dittman, sd15@cornell.edu

NEW YORK DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH
5 Penn Plaza, Room 307
New York, NY  10001
FAX: None given     Phone:  (212) 613-4376

Sonja Hedlund, sah05@albnydh2

NEW YORK UNIVERSITY
Department of Health Education
35 W. 4th Street
New York, NY  10012
FAX: (212) 995-4192 Phone: None given

Alyson Taub, taubal@acfcluster.nyu.edu

STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK (SUNY) AT BUFFALO
Department of Health Behavioral Sciences
604 Kimball Tower, South Campus
Buffalo, NY  14228
FAX:  (716) 688-2505     Phone:  (716) 829-3434

Darwin Dennison, dennison@acsu.buffalo.edu

SUNY AT CORTLAND, NEW YORK
Department of Health
Box 2000
Cortland, NY 13045
FAX: (607) 753-5999      Phone:  (607) 753-2982

Bonni C. Hodges, hodgesb@snycorva.cortland.edu
Kim Lim, limk@snycorva.cortland.edu

SUNY AT DELHI
College of Technology
Foreman Hall 105
Delhi, NY  13753
FAX:  (607) 746-4141        Phone: (607) 746-4194

Andrew Hill, hillac@snybuf.cs.snybuf.edu

SUNY AT OSWEGO, NEW YORK
Department of Health & Physical Education
106 Lee Hall
Oswego,  NY
FAX: (315) 341-2766      Phone:  None given

Michael Peterson, ppeterso@oswego.oswego.edu

SUNY INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY AT UTICA/ROME
Box 3050
Health Sciences Center
Utica, NY  13504
FAX:  (315) 792-7112     Phone:  (315) 792-7541

Sally Easterbrook Robilotto, sser@sunyit.edu

NORTH CAROLINA

EAST CAROLINA UNIVERSITY
Department of Health Education
Greenville, NC  27858
FAX:  (919) 757-4655     Phone: (919) 757-4638

Rick Barnes, hpbarnes@ecuvm1
David White,  hpwhite@ecuvm1
Sharon Knight,  hpknight@ecuvm1
Mary Glascoff, hpglasco@ecuvm1
Anthony V. Parillo, coparril@ecuvm.cis.ecu.edu
Patricia C. Dunn, hpdunn@ecuvm.cis.ecu.edu
Carol Ann Tucker, hptucker@ecuvm.cis.ecu.edu
     
AIDS, parenting, violence preventionY


UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA AT CHAPEL HILL
Center for Health Promotion and Disease Prevention
CB# 8140
Chapel Hill,   NC  27599
FAX: (919) 966-3374 Phone: (919) 966-5598

Carolyn E. Crump, ccrump@sphvax.sph.unc.edu

UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA AT GREENSBORO
Department of Public Health Education
Suite 437, HHP Building
Greensboro,  NC  27412
FAX:  (910) 334-3238          Phone:  (910) 334-5532

Kathleen D. Mullen, mullenk@iris.uncg.edu
Keith Howell, howellk@iris.uncg.edu
Lyn Lawrance, lawrance@iris.uncg.edu
Daniel Bibeau, bibeau@iris.uncg.edu

OHIO

AMERICAN HEART ASSOCIATION--EASTERN OHIO
1418 East Midlothian
Youngstown, OH  44502
FAX:  (216) 788-1414        Phone: (216) 788-1870

Denise Wilson, denise@amheart.org

THE UNIVERSITY OF AKRON
Dept of Phyical & Health Education
Akron, Ohio 44325-5103
FAX: (216) 972-5636 Phone: (216) 972-6273

Davison Munodawafa, r1dm@vm1.cc.uakron.edu

BOWLING GREEN STATE UNIVERSITY
School of Health, Physical Education & Recreation
Bowling Green, Ohio  43403
FAX:  (419) 372-8012     Phone:  (419) 372-0301

Molly Laflin,  mlaflin@andy.bgsu.edu or mlafli2@trapper.bgsu.edu

CLEVELAND STATE UNIVERSITY
Department of H & PE
Cleveland, OH  44115
FAX: (216) 687-5415 Phone: (216) 687-4884

Judith Ausherman, j.ausherman@csuohio.edu

KENT STATE UNIVERSITY
Department of Adult, Counseling, Health & Vocational Education
316 White Hall
Kent, Ohio 44242
FAX: (216) 672-3063      Phone: (216) 672-7977

Chuck Kegley, ckegley@kentvm.kent.edu
R. Scott Olds,  rolds@kentvm.kent.edu
Marcia Rubin, mrubin1@kentvm.kent.edu
J. Byrne, jbyrne@kentvm.kent.edu
Dianne Kerr, dkerr@kentvm.kent.edu
Bill London, wlondon@kentvm.kent.edu
     
consumer health;  drug education;  epidemiologyY

MIAMI UNIVERSITY
Physical Education, Health & Sport Studies
Phillips Hall, Room 162
Oxford, OH  45056-1618
FAX: (513) 529-5006      Phone:  (513) 529-2736

Valerie A. Ubbes,  vaubbes@miamiu.acs.muohio.edu
Reginald Fennell, rfennell@miamiu.acs.edu

OHIO UNIVERSITY
514 The Tower
School of Health & Sports Sciences
Athens, OH  45701-2979
FAX:  (614) 593-0555     Phone:  (614) 593-0232

Ernesto (Ernie) A. Randolsfi, randolfi@ouvaxa.cats.ohiou.edu

THE OHIO STATE UNIVERSITY
Department of Health Promotion and Education
1760 Neil Avenue
202 Pomerene Hall
Columbus, OH  43210
FAX:  (614) 292-7229     Phone:  (614) 292-3528

Kathleen M. Lux,   klux@magnusacs.ohio-state.edu

THE UNIVERSITY OF TOLEDO
Dept. Health Promotion & Human Performance
Toledo, Ohio   43606
FAX:   (419)537-4759     Phone: (419)537-4158

James Price,  fac0076@uoft01.utoledo.edu
Kathleen Jeffrey, fac4101@uoft01.utoledo.edu
Rae Schnuth, fac4533@uoft01.utoledo.edu

Doctoral Students:

Sherry Everett, fac4158@uoft01.utoledo.edu

UNIVERSITY OF CINCINNATI
College of Education, ML 0002
Cincinnati, OH  45221-0002
FAX:  (513) 556-2483     Phone:  (513) 556-2335

Justin Odulana, justin.odulana@uc.edu

OREGON

EASTERN OREGON STATE COLLEGE
1410 L Avenue
La Grande, Oregon  97850
FAX:  None Given            Phone:  (503) 962-3399

Danny Ray Mielke, dmielke@eosc.osshe.edu

PENNSYLVANIA

CLARION UNIVERSITY
Department of Health & Physical Education
110 Tippin Gym
Clarion, PA  16214-1232
FAX:  None given            Phone:  (814) 226-2390

Rebecca Leas, leas@vaxa.clarion.edu

PENN STATE UNIVERSITY
Room 1 White Building
University Park, PA  16802
Health Education Department
FAX:  (814) 863-8586     Phone: (814) 863-0435

Collins Airhihenbuwa, aou@psu.edu
Michael Frith, mxf16@psuvm.psu.edu
Michael Ludwig, mjl122@psuvm.psu.edu
Mike Perez,  map130@psuvm.psu.edu
Paul James Pinciaro, pjp110@psuvm.psu.edu
     
health education;  health promotion;  sports medicineY

Doctoral Students:

Jean Harris, jlh148@psuvm.psu.edu
Myrta Owen, mho101@psuvm.psu.edu

PENN STATE UNIVERSITY
Office of Human Resources
120 South Burrowes St.
University Park, PA  16802
Fax:  (814) 865-7145    Phone:  (814) 865-3085

Nancy Sassano, ner1@psuadmin
Cassandra Thompson, cmt2@oas.psu.edu
     
self-care;  wellnessY

PENN STATE UNIVERSITY
Center for Worksite Health Enhancement
Box 3 Rider Building
University Park, PA  16801
FAX:  (814) 865-7145        Phone:  (814) 865-3085

Rob Rager, ryr@psuvm.psu.edu
Janetta Grapperhaus,  jsg8@psuadmin
     
worksite health promotionY

UNIVERSITY OF PITTSBURGH
School of Education, Dept of Instruction Learning, MAPS Program
5D01 Forbes Quandrangle
Pittsburgh, PA  15260
FAX:  (412) 648-7191     Phone: (412) 648-7196

Carl I. Fertman, carl@vms.cis.pitt.edu

WEST CHESTER UNIVERSITY
Department of Health
South Campus
West Chester, PA  19383
FAX: Not Available  Phone:  (610) 436-2931

Sheila Patterson,  spatters@wcupa.edu
Bethann Cinelli, bcinelli@wcupa.edu
Gopal Sankaran,  gsankaran@wcupa.edu
Lynn Carson,   lcarson@wcupa.edu
Rebecca Brey, rbrey@wcupa.edu
     
school health education; eating disorders; drug educationY
Betty Boyle, bboyle@wcupa.edu

RHODE ISLAND

BROWN UNIVERSITY
Health Education
Providence, RI
FAX: (401)  863-7953        Phone: (401)  863-2794

Mary Lou McMillan, marylou_mcmillan@brown.edu

SOUTH DAKOTA

NORTHERN STATE UNIVERSITY
1200 S Jay
NSU Box 719
Aberdeen, SD  57401
FAX:  (605)  622-3022       Phone:  (605)  622-7688

Kathie Courtney,  ncks@sdsumus.sdstate.edu

THE UNIVERSITY OF SOUTH DAKOTA
Division of HPER
108B School of Education
Vermillion, SD  57069
FAX: (605) 677-5438      Phone:  (605) 677-5839

Michael Hoadley,   mhoadley@charlie.usd.edu
Marilyn Wells, mwells@charlie.usd.edu

SWITZERLAND


INSTITU DE MEDECINE SOCIALE ET PREVENTIVE
Planchamp2 5 / 1066 epalinges
Lausanne, Switzerland
FAX:  None given            Phone:  None given

Bertrand Graz, bgraz@ulme17.unil.ch
     
trachoma, blindness prevention, trichiasis conservative treatmentY

TEXAS

RICE UNIVERSITY
Human Performance and Health Sciences
P.O. BOX 1892
Houston, Texas 77251
FAX: (713) 527-4058 Phone: (713) 285-5329

Nicholas K. Iammarino,  nki@rice.edu

TEXAS A & M
Department of  Health and Kinesiology
College Station, TX 77843-1255
FAX: (409) 847-8987 Phone: (409) 845-3109

Brian Colwell, gbc4804@zeus.tamu.edu
     
school health;  cancer education;  tobacco use preventionY
Paul M. Kingery,  k081pk@zeus.tamu.Edu
Wayne Wylie, c153ww@tamvm1.tamu.Edu
Danny Ballard, djb4933@summa.tamu.edu
     
women's health;  comprehensive school health;
     psychoneuroimmunologyY
Gayle Schmidt, k494a6@tamvm1.tamu.edu

TEXAS MEDICAL CENTER
Center for Cancer Control and Research
Baylor Collegeof Medicine
6550 Fannin  MS SM443
Houston TX  77030
FAX: (713) 798-3990 Phone: (713) 798-4614

Armin D. Weinberg,   arminw@bcm.tmc.edu
Larry Laufman, llaufman@bcm.tmc.edu
     
Cancer prevention, program eval., smoking cessationY

TEXAS WOMAN'S UNIVERSITY
Department of Health Studies
Box 22808
Denton, TX
FAX: (817) 898-3198 Phone: (817) 898-2860

Judith A. Baker,   f_baker@twu.edu
Bill Cissel, d_cissell@twu.edu
     
professional preparation;  administration;  international healthY
Eva Doyle, f_doyle@twu.edu
Susan Ward, f_ward@twu.edu

Doctoral Students:
Majid Ghazizadeh, g_ghazizadeh@twu.edu
Greg Gliemi, dg_gliemi@twu.edu
Debbie Kern, g_kern@twu.edu
Ying Liu, g_liu@twu.edu
Bridgette Pullis, g_pullis@twu.edu
Jodie Terrell, g_terrell@twu.edu
Kristin Wiginton, g_wiginton@twu.edu

UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS AT ARLINGTON
Center for Nursing Research
School of Nursing
Box 19407
Arlington, TX  76019
FAX:  (817) 794-5006     Phone: (817) 273-2776

Nancy Burns, burns@albert.uta.edu

UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS AT AUSTIN
Department of Kinesiology and Health
Austin, Texas
FAX:  (512) 471-8914     Phone: (512) 471-4405

Polly Edmundson,  polly@utxvm.cc.utexas.edu
Nell Gottlieb, pybw773@utxvm.cc.utexas.edu

Doctoral Student:

Rick Cantara, rick.cantara@mail.utexas.edu

VIRGINIA

GEORGE MASON UNIVERSITY
Department of Human Services
Fairfax, VA 22030-4444
FAX: (703) 993-2050      Phone:  (703) 993-2072

Richard Miller,   emiller@gmuvax.gmu.edu

JAMES MADISON UNIVERSITY
Department of Health Sciences
Harrisonburg, VA  22807
FAX: (703) 568-3336 Phone: (703) 568-6510

Steve Stewart,   fac_stewart@vax2.acs.jmu.edu
Debra Sutton,   fac_dsutton@vax1.acs.jmu.edu

LONGWOOD COLLEGE
Department of HPER
201 High Street
Farmville, VA 23909
FAX: (804) 395-2568         Phone:  (804) 395-2543

Chrystyna Kosarchyn, ckosarch@lwcnet.lwc.edu

UNIVERSITY OF VIRGINIA
Institute of Quality Health
141 Ednam Drive
Charlottesville, VA  22903
FAX:  (804) 979-5146        Phone: (804) 979-9355

Rebecca H. Reeve, rhr5c@virginia.edu
     
evaluation;  worksite health promotion;  HIV/AIDSY

WASHINGTON

CENTRAL WASHINGTON UNIVERSITY
Health Education Programs
Ellensburg WA, 98926
FAX:  None Given            Phone:  (509) 963-1041

Andrew P Jenkins, jenkinsa@cwu.edu
     
substance abuse;  fitness; male health issuesY

THE UNIVERSITY OF WASHINGTON
Center for Studies in Health Education
1107 NE 45th, Suite 215
Seattle, WA 98105
Fax: (206) 545-3671 Phone: (206) 545-3586

Bob Collins, collinsb@u.washington.edu
     
curriculum development;  program evaluation;
     professional preparationY

THE UNIVERSITY OF WASHINGTON
Department of Medicine
1265 S. Main Street, Suite 300
Seattle, WA  98144
FAX:  (206) 328-2845        Phone: (206) 685-4331

Mary Annese, annese@u.washington.edu
     
family planning;  community/school bases services;
     cultural sensitivityY

LEWIS COUNTY & COWLITZ COUNTY HEALTH DEPARTMENTS
University of Washington School of Public Health and Community Medicine
HSD 01, 360 N.W. North Street
Chehalis, WA 98532
FAX: (206) 740-1472         Phone: (206) 740-1316

Thomas A. Bell,  thomasbell@u.washington.edu
     
Sexually transmitted diseases, HIV/AIDS, food and waterY

WASHINGTON, D.C.

THE PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES
1600 Pennsylvania Avenue
The White House
Washington,  DC
FAX:  None given         Phone: None given

Bill Clinton,  president@whitehouse.gov
     
health care reform;  administration;  fitnessY
Al Gore, vice.president@whitehouse.gov
     
environmental health issuesY

INSTITUTE OF MEDICINE--FO 3011
2101 Constitution Ave., NW
Washington, DC  20418

FAX (202) 334-1385  Phone: (202) 334-2363

Elaine Lawson,  elawson@nas.edu

WEST VIRGINIA

WEST VIRGINIA UNIVERSITY
Department of Community Medicine;  Community Health Promotion
Box 6116, 279 Coliseum
Morgantown, WV  26506-6116
FAX:  (304) 293-4641     Phone:  (304) 293-5915

Robert H. Anderson, randers@wvnvm.wvnet.edu
     
tobacco & alcohol control;  wellness;  distance educationY
Elbert Glover, eglover@wvuohsr.hsc.wvu.edu

WISCONSIN

UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN AT MADISON
Health Services
1552 University Avenue
Madison, WI  53705
FAX: (608) 262-9160 Phone: (608) 265-2536

Rob Sepich, rsepich@macc.wisc.edu

UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN AT RIVER FALLS
Department of Health and Human Performance
410 South 3rd Street
River Falls, WI  54022-5001
FAX: (715) 425-3696 Phone: (715) 425-3966

Faye J. Perkins, faye.j.perkins@uwrf.edu
===========================================================
==============
#263
Date:         Fri, 2 Sep 1994 07:58:47 GMT+0200
From:         " ANSA.OJANLATVA@UTU.FI" 
Subject:      research-teaching -connection?

--Boundary (ID li4wmC6ZGsbNF7sak+mHXw)
Content-type: TEXT/PLAIN; CHARSET=US-ASCII

As this fall semester gets underway, the following kinds of issues will become
important again. May all of you prosper in this regard this school year.
 Ansa.Õ**** Insert text here ****þ



Ansa Ojanlatva, PhD, CHES, CSE       Internet: ansa.ojanlatva@sara.cc.utu.fi
Department of Public Health
University of Turku
Lemminkaisenkatu 1
20520 Turku/Finland

tel. +358-21-633 8513           +358-21-633 81 (operator)
                                FAX  +358-21-633 8439


--Boundary (ID li4wmC6ZGsbNF7sak+mHXw)
MIME-version: 1.0
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Return-path: 
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Date: Thu, 01 Sep 1994 10:17:45 +0300
Resent-from: kuittinen@joyl.joensuu.fi
From: kuittinen@joyl.joensuu.fi (MATTI KUITTINEN)
Subject: EDUC: research vs. teaching; which comes first?
 educ-request@ra.abo.fi
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Teaching/Research links?

     Most skirmishes in the eternal research vs. teaching debate begin
with a pronouncement like the recent one on this list that "Research
and teaching are inextricably linked." The implications, stated or
hidden, are that those who are not active in research can't possibly be
doing good teaching, let alone outstanding teaching, and that a policy
requiring every professor to be an active researcher as a condition for
advancement is therefore justified.

        You would think that the advocates of this position would have done
some research themselves to support it, or that they would at least
have bothered to find out if anyone else has done any, and if so, what
the results were.  But no--the powerful linkage between research and
teaching is simply trotted out as a tautology, self-evident enough not
to need any formal support.

   In fact, lots of research has been done, and the results fail to confirm
the linkage.  Responding to Peter Havholm's request for citations, I offer the
following.

   Brown and Mayhew (1965) reviewed studies done before 1965 and concluded
that
no relationship had ever been found between teaching effectiveness and
research productivity.  Finkelstein (1984) and Feldman (1987) looked at more
recent studies and found that the alleged correlation between good teaching
and strong research was either nonexistent or, in a minority of cases,
slightly positive. The latter result is not particularly impressive,
considering the number of outstanding teachers who have done little or no
research and have consequently been weeded out of academia in their first few
years.  Quality of publications (as assessed by frequency of citation) was
considerably more likely than any other publication measure to correlate
NEGATIVELY with rated teaching effectiveness.  Most professors who put in the
intensive time and energy it takes to do first-class research have little of
either left to do what it takes to do first-class teaching, even if they have
the talent to do so, which not all do.

   Perhaps most tellingly, in his landmark longitudinal study of 25,000
students at 309 institutions, Astin (1993) found that the research
orientation of the faculty (as measured by publications, funding, &
recognition for research achievement) correlates negatively with completion
of the bachelor's degree, various other measures of academic performance, and
student satisfaction with quality of instruction and the overall college
experience. Research and teaching may be linked, all right, but not in the
positive way that the research advocates would like us to believe, and
certainly not in a way that can possibly excuse the bad teaching AND bad
research that have come out of the current research-dominated academic
incentive and reward system (Smith, 1990).

   If you're interested, I've summarized the above results and quite a bit
more on the subject in "The Myth of the Superhuman Professor" (Felder, 1994).
As you'll see if you check it out, I'm not anti-research. On the contrary, I
believe that a strong academic research program is vital to the intellectual
and technological well-being of a society. The damage comes when we use a
one-size-fits-all criterion for faculty advancement--specifically, when we
require outstanding research and only adequate teaching (if that) of every
professor in every department as conditions for promotion, tenure, and
raises.

   The solution, in my opinion, has been articulated beautifully by Ernest
Boyer (1990)--namely, multiple pathways to academic success, with some
professors doing frontier research, some doing applied research, some
specializing in academically based community and social service, and some
specializing in pedagogy--doing outstanding teaching, developing and/or
importing innovative instructional methodologies, writing textbooks,
developing instructional software, and training and mentoring junior
colleagues on the craft of effective teaching. Faculty members would normally
shift from one pathway to another as their interests and inclinations change
throughout their careers.  The criterion for advancement on every path would
be the same--excellence in the performance of the tasks and responsibilities
associated with that pathway. No second-class citizens except for reasons of
inadequate performance. All of the vital university functions--teaching,
research, and service, would then be performed by people with the desire,
aptitude, and time to do them well. Everyone wins.

   All that will remain an idle dream, however, as long as administrations
keep requiring all faculty members to produce their 2 major grants and 3-5
refereed journal articles every year to get and keep first-class academic
citizenship, and as long as faculty members defend this system as a logical
consequence of a mythical linkage between research productivity and teaching
effectiveness.

REFERENCES

Astin, A.W., 1993. What Matters in College. San Francisco, Jossey-Bass.

Boyer, E.L., 1990. Scholarship Reconsidered: Priorities of the Professoriate.
Princeton, NJ, Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching.

Brown, H., and L.B. Mayhew, 1965. American Higher Education. NY, Center for
Applied Research in Education. (Cited by Smith, 1990)

Felder, R.M., 1994. "The Myth of the Superhuman Professor." Journal of
Engineering Education, 83(2), 105-110.

Feldman, K.A., 1987. "Research Productivity and Scholarly Accomplishment of
Coll
ege
Teachers as Related to their Instructional Effectiveness: A Review and
Exploration," Research in Higher Education, 26, 227-298.

Finkelstein, M.J., 1984. The American Academic Profession. Columbus, OH, Ohio
State Press.

Smith, P., 1990.  Killing the Spirit: Higher Education in America. New York,
Viking.

---------------------------------------------------------------------
Richard M. Felder
Chemical Engineering, N.C. State University
felder@eos.ncsu.edu


--Boundary (ID li4wmC6ZGsbNF7sak+mHXw)--
===========================================================
==============
#264
Date:         Fri, 2 Sep 1994 10:09:07 EDT
From:         "Elbert D. Glover" 
Organization: WVU Office of Health Srvcs Research
Subject:      Re: Descriptors

My address is listed incorrectly.  I am not in the Community Medicine
Department nor am I at the address listed.

Elbert D. Glover, PhD
Director, Tobacco Research Center
Professor, Behavioral Medicine & Psychiatry
Mary Babb Randolph Cancer Center
West Virginia University
Robert C. Byrd Health Sciences Center
Morgantown, WV 26506
304-293-6988 Office
304-293-4693 Fax

The descriptors for my research, life, and existence are:

Smoking Cessation
Smokeless Tobacco
Nicotine Replacement Therapy

If it's tobacco we've got it!
===========================================================
==============
#265
Date:         Fri, 2 Sep 1994 14:28:00 EDT
From:         dl16 
Subject:      Re: research-teaching -connection?
In-Reply-To:  <9409021528.AA01523@umailsrv1.UMD.EDU>

>--Boundary (ID li4wmC6ZGsbNF7sak+mHXw)
>Content-type: TEXT/PLAIN; CHARSET=US-ASCII
>
>As this fall semester gets underway, the following kinds of issues will become
>important again. May all of you prosper in this regard this school year.
> Ansa.Õ**** Insert text here ****þ
>
>
>
>Ansa Ojanlatva, PhD, CHES, CSE       Internet: ansa.ojanlatva@sara.cc.utu.fi
>Department of Public Health
>University of Turku
>Lemminkaisenkatu 1
>20520 Turku/Finland
>
>tel. +358-21-633 8513           +358-21-633 81 (operator)
>                                FAX  +358-21-633 8439
>
>
>--Boundary (ID li4wmC6ZGsbNF7sak+mHXw)
>MIME-version: 1.0
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>
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>Date: Thu, 01 Sep 1994 10:17:45 +0300
>Resent-from: kuittinen@joyl.joensuu.fi
>From: kuittinen@joyl.joensuu.fi (MATTI KUITTINEN)
>Subject: EDUC: research vs. teaching; which comes first?
> educ-request@ra.abo.fi
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>
>
>Teaching/Research links?
>
>     Most skirmishes in the eternal research vs. teaching debate begin
>with a pronouncement like the recent one on this list that "Research
>and teaching are inextricably linked." The implications, stated or
>hidden, are that those who are not active in research can't possibly be
>doing good teaching, let alone outstanding teaching, and that a policy
>requiring every professor to be an active researcher as a condition for
>advancement is therefore justified.
>
>        You would think that the advocates of this position would have done
>some research themselves to support it, or that they would at least
>have bothered to find out if anyone else has done any, and if so, what
>the results were.  But no--the powerful linkage between research and
>teaching is simply trotted out as a tautology, self-evident enough not
>to need any formal support.
>
>   In fact, lots of research has been done, and the results fail to confirm
>the linkage.  Responding to Peter Havholm's request for citations, I offer the
>following.
>
>   Brown and Mayhew (1965) reviewed studies done before 1965 and concluded
that
>no relationship had ever been found between teaching effectiveness and
>research productivity.  Finkelstein (1984) and Feldman (1987) looked at more
>recent studies and found that the alleged correlation between good teaching
>and strong research was either nonexistent or, in a minority of cases,
>slightly positive. The latter result is not particularly impressive,
>considering the number of outstanding teachers who have done little or no
>research and have consequently been weeded out of academia in their first few
>years.  Quality of publications (as assessed by frequency of citation) was
>considerably more likely than any other publication measure to correlate
>NEGATIVELY with rated teaching effectiveness.  Most professors who put in the
>intensive time and energy it takes to do first-class research have little of
>either left to do what it takes to do first-class teaching, even if they have
>the talent to do so, which not all do.
>
>   Perhaps most tellingly, in his landmark longitudinal study of 25,000
>students at 309 institutions, Astin (1993) found that the research
>orientation of the faculty (as measured by publications, funding, &
>recognition for research achievement) correlates negatively with completion
>of the bachelor's degree, various other measures of academic performance, and
>student satisfaction with quality of instruction and the overall college
>experience. Research and teaching may be linked, all right, but not in the
>positive way that the research advocates would like us to believe, and
>certainly not in a way that can possibly excuse the bad teaching AND bad
>research that have come out of the current research-dominated academic
>incentive and reward system (Smith, 1990).
>
>   If you're interested, I've summarized the above results and quite a bit
>more on the subject in "The Myth of the Superhuman Professor" (Felder, 1994).
>As you'll see if you check it out, I'm not anti-research. On the contrary, I
>believe that a strong academic research program is vital to the intellectual
>and technological well-being of a society. The damage comes when we use a
>one-size-fits-all criterion for faculty advancement--specifically, when we
>require outstanding research and only adequate teaching (if that) of every
>professor in every department as conditions for promotion, tenure, and
>raises.
>
>   The solution, in my opinion, has been articulated beautifully by Ernest
>Boyer (1990)--namely, multiple pathways to academic success, with some
>professors doing frontier research, some doing applied research, some
>specializing in academically based community and social service, and some
>specializing in pedagogy--doing outstanding teaching, developing and/or
>importing innovative instructional methodologies, writing textbooks,
>developing instructional software, and training and mentoring junior
>colleagues on the craft of effective teaching. Faculty members would normally
>shift from one pathway to another as their interests and inclinations change
>throughout their careers.  The criterion for advancement on every path would
>be the same--excellence in the performance of the tasks and responsibilities
>associated with that pathway. No second-class citizens except for reasons of
>inadequate performance. All of the vital university functions--teaching,
>research, and service, would then be performed by people with the desire,
>aptitude, and time to do them well. Everyone wins.
>
>   All that will remain an idle dream, however, as long as administrations
>keep requiring all faculty members to produce their 2 major grants and 3-5
>refereed journal articles every year to get and keep first-class academic
>citizenship, and as long as faculty members defend this system as a logical
>consequence of a mythical linkage between research productivity and teaching
>effectiveness.
>
>REFERENCES
>
>Astin, A.W., 1993. What Matters in College. San Francisco, Jossey-Bass.
>
>Boyer, E.L., 1990. Scholarship Reconsidered: Priorities of the Professoriate.
>Princeton, NJ, Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching.
>
>Brown, H., and L.B. Mayhew, 1965. American Higher Education. NY, Center for
>Applied Research in Education. (Cited by Smith, 1990)
>
>Felder, R.M., 1994. "The Myth of the Superhuman Professor." Journal of
>Engineering Education, 83(2), 105-110.
>
>Feldman, K.A., 1987. "Research Productivity and Scholarly Accomplishment of
Coll
>ege
>Teachers as Related to their Instructional Effectiveness: A Review and
>Exploration," Research in Higher Education, 26, 227-298.
>
>Finkelstein, M.J., 1984. The American Academic Profession. Columbus, OH, Ohio
>State Press.
>
>Smith, P., 1990.  Killing the Spirit: Higher Education in America. New York,
>Viking.
>
>---------------------------------------------------------------------
>Richard M. Felder
>Chemical Engineering, N.C. State University
>felder@eos.ncsu.edu
>
>
>--Boundary (ID li4wmC6ZGsbNF7sak+mHXw)--
>
One great issue is and will be the elimination or prevention of
people-caused deaths (Horrendous Death) where the motivation is to kill others
(e.g. homicide, war, terrorism, direct result of racism, man-made starvation,
etc.), or where that motivation is absent (e.g., accidents, death as an
indrect result of racism, poverty, drug abuse, etc.). It is the
number one health problem of our time almost totally ignored by health
professionals and others because the Horrendous Death - Global Health &
Well-being concept is concerned with action to remove *causes* as well as
*symptoms*.>

Daniel LEVITON
Email:Daniel_LEVITON@umail.umd.edu (dl16)
Phone:52528
===========================================================
==============
#266
Date:         Sun, 4 Sep 1994 08:02:35 -0400
From:         Mary Sutherland 

>Just a brief memo to let you know the status of the descriptors
>of the individuals listed in the directory.  For the month of September,
>those individuals who are full-time staff, and reside in states that
>begin with the letters A through K, send three short descriptors of
>your areas of interest.
>
>The directory keeps growing, thanks to many of you.  Keep up the
>good work.
>
>_____________________________________________________
>
>Mark J. Kittleson, Ph.D., ga3748@siucvmb.siu.edu
>Southern Illinois University
>Founder and Owner of the International E-Mail Directory
>and the HEDIR listserv
>
>"The best defense is a strong offense, and I
>intend to start offending right now."
>


Descriptors of Mary Sutherland

Minority, Rural Church Based Health Promotion/Drug Prevention
School Health Education
Intergenerational Health Promotion/Drug Prevention


Mary Sutherland
Professor
Florida State University
Department of Curriculum and Instruction
209 Carothers Hall
>Tallahassee, Fl  32306
PHONE 904 644 2122
FAX   904 644 1880

      or=20

(Project Office)
Mary Sutherland
Principal Investigator
Area Agency on Aging for North Florida, Inc.
2639 N. Monroe Street
Tallahassee, FL 32303

PHONE  904 488 0055
FAX    904 922 2429
===========================================================
==============
#267
Date:         Tue, 6 Sep 1994 01:17:18 -0500
From:         ronald bonnstetter 
Subject:      Re: research-teaching
In-Reply-To:  <9409021817.AA16371@unlinfo.unl.edu> from "
              ANSA.OJANLATVA@UTU.FI" at Sep 2, 94 07:58:47 am

The article you sent came just at the right time.  I just wrote a memo
related to the issue of research and teaching. Now I need to rethink
my argument.  Shit.

It is 1:30 in the morning and I really need to get some sleep some
time soon good night
ron
--
Ronald J. Bonnstetter                   Office Phone (402) 472-2443
211 Henzlik Hall                        Home Phone   (402) 423-9138
University of Nebraska                  FAX          (402) 472-8317
Lincoln, NE  68588-0355
===========================================================
==============
#268
Date:         Tue, 6 Sep 1994 10:22:15 -0400
From:         BENSLEY@WMICH.EDU
Subject:      Responding to directory wide messages

Please do not respond to directory wide broadcasts by using the "reply"
command.  If you want to respond to a directory wide broadcast message, you
need to use the "send" command and specify a SPECIFIC ADDRESS.  The entire
directory does not need to know your three descriptors, etc.  Also, if you do
repsond to the entire directory memebership or if you send a note to the
entire directory, please try to keep it on a professional level.  Ron
Bonnstetter's recent "reply" to a directory wide mesaage is an examle of what
I mean.  Thanks.
===========================================================
==============
#269
Date:         Tue, 6 Sep 1994 09:32:37 CDT
From:         Kim Miner 
Organization: Minnesota Department of Health
Subject:      Position Announcement

Greetings!

The Minnesota Department of Health currently has a position opening
in the Health Education Unit for an epidemiologist.  Position
responsibilities will involve working closely with a health
educator and local public health agencies to assess community
chemical health (alcohol, tobacco and other drugs) and violence.

The epidmiologist will play a key role in defining and measuring
indicators of community chemical health and violence.  There is room
for considerable creativity and influence as to what these indicators
may look like.  This work has potential to influence local and state
policy on issues related to violence and chemical health.

We are interested in candidates with chemical health promotion and/or
violence prevention backgrounds, but haven't limited the search to
epidemiologists with such experience.

Please route potential candidates and/or specific position-related
questions to Lee Kingsbury, Health Eduction Unit Leader (612-623-
5213).

THANKS!!


 '___0
 _\_<,
(*)/'(*)

Kim Miner

FAS Prevention Coordinator
Health Promotion & Education
Minnesota Department of Health
717 Delaware St. SE
PO Box 9441
Minneapolis, MN  55440-9441

Phone:  (612) 623-5334
FAX:    (612) 623-5775
E-mail: kim.miner@health.state.mn.us
===========================================================
==============
#270
Date:         Tue, 6 Sep 1994 16:00:17 GMT
From:         "Harnby, Louise" 
Subject:      Journal of Health Psychology

     JOURNAL OF HEALTH PSYCHOLOGY
     An Interdisciplinary, International Journal

     * Call for Papers *

     Editor:
     Professor David Marks, Health Research Centre,
     Middlesex University, UK

     SAGE Publications is pleased to announce the launch in 1996 of the
     Journal of Health Psychology. This major new international journal will
     draw together some of the most respected scholars and researchers in
     the world to produce a major forum for the best research and debate in
     health pscyhology. The Journal of Health Psychology will...

     * Acknowledge the interdisciplinary nature of health issues, drawing
     on contributions from clinical psychology, social psychology,
     medicine, public health, health communication and related fields.
     * Encourage the development of sound theoretical analysis in health
     psychology.
     * Contain research from the best empirical traditions of rigorous
     psychological methodology while providing a platform for new
     perspectives of a more qualitative and/or critical orientation.
     * Provide an international forum for the best of health psychology
     from around the world.
     * Reflect the social significance of health psychology by addressing
     the social, political and economic context in which psychological and
     health processes are embedded.

     The Journal of Health Psychology will publish quarterly in January,
     April, August and December, commencing with the January 1996 issue.

     Contributions are invited now for early issues of the journal.
     Information regarding the submission of manuscripts can be obtained
     from Professor David Marks, Health Research Centre,
     Middlesex University, Queensway, Enfield, Middlesex, UK.
     Tel/Fax: +44 81 362 5558. E-Mail: david78@mdx.ac.uk

     For a free sample copy of the Journal of Health Psychology upon
     publication (January 1996) please send your full postal address to
     Louise Harnby . Please type "Ref: HPQ" in the
     subject box.
===========================================================
==============
#271
Date:         Wed, 7 Sep 1994 10:19:31 CST
From:         f_doyle@VENUS.TWU.EDU
Subject:      Call for Submissions

The Health Studies Department of Texas Woman's University is compiling a
nonprofit directory entitled "Teaching Strategies for Cultural Diversity
in Health Education".  It will contain descriptions of specific classroom
activities used by identified health educators to foster cultural awareness
and sensitivity.  The directory will be available to health educators
throughout the profession.

WHY?

Many of us recognize the need to address cultural diversity in health
education.  Knowing exactly how to do that in the classroom setting is
another matter.  Sharing strategies used by health educators across the
profession can strengthen the overall quality of cultural diversity
teaching and identify those who are applying their creative abilities
toward this important work.

DEADLINE FOR SUBMISSIONS: February 6, 1995

SUBMISSION FORMAT:  Include the following on 2-3 typed (double spaced)
pages.
* Strategy name/title (6-word maximum)
* Author(s), Program/Department, Institution/Organization
* Learning objectives/expected outcomes
* Needed materials and preparation
* Methods and implementation tips
* Related handouts (not included in the 2-3 page maximum)

INCLUDE: Your name, mailing/E-mail address, and phone number

MAIL SUBMISSIONS TO:
Dr. Eva Doyle
Health Studies Dept.
Texas Woman's University
P.O. Box 22808
Denton, TX  76204-0808
FAX: 817-898-3198
PH: 817-898-2841
E-MAIL: f_doyle@twu.edu
===========================================================
==============
#272
Date:         Wed, 7 Sep 1994 13:00:09 -0700
From:         Cheri A Pies 

Subscribe Cheri Pies
===========================================================
==============
#273
Date:         Wed, 7 Sep 1994 17:20:41 -0600
From:         Michele Mannion 
Subject:      Dogma and condoms . . .

I am interested in information related to Roman Catholic doctrine regarding
HIV/AIDS, specifically prevention of the virus and condom use.  I am
planning an HIV/AIDS awareness program for employees here at Notre Dame next
spring; in the face of many misperceptions here, this is much needed.  My
dilemma is this:  although I can deliver the program, I am limited with
regard to the content:  I CANNOT mention the use of condoms as a means of
prevention.  I thought of contacting other Catholic institutions to see how
they're handling this, but have been told what Georgetown or BC is doing is
irrelevant--it's not just the Cabots who talk only to God . . .
Any suggestions or words of wisdom for a health educator being asked to tie
her hands behind her back?

Best of health,

Michele Mannion
+ + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + +
Michele Mannion
219-631-5829
Notre Dame Human Resources
===========================================================
==============
#274
Date:         Fri, 9 Sep 1994 07:52:18 -0600
From:         Kelli McCormack Brown 
Subject:      American School Health Association  Oct 5 - 9, 1944

Eta Sigma Gamma, The National Health Education Honoarary, is sponsoring a
Graduate Networking session at the American School Health Association
Conference in Houston, Texas.

On Thursday October 6, 1994 from 10:30 a.m. - 12:00 noon graduate programs
who would like to share information with students and colleagues may do so.
Tables will be set up (with table skirt and two chairs per table) for you to
display information (if you like) OR have someone available to answer
questions about your program and send information to the
student(s)/colleague(s) at a later time.

This is a perfect opportunity for students/colleagues to learn about the
program(s) you have to offer.  Colleagues will also be interested,
particularly those who work in advising at the undergraduate or graduate
level as they advise students on masters or doctoral programs that may be
a good match for their specific needs.

If are going to be at ASHA and are interested in having a table to provide
information about your program please contact:

                     Kelli McCormack Brown
                     Illinois State University
                     309-438-8329
                     kbrown@ilstu

Deadline:  September 20, 1994

If you receive this message and you do not work with a graduate program
please share with a colleague at your university who works with graduate
programming.
===========================================================
==============
#275
Date:         Sat, 10 Sep 1994 11:27:00 EDT
From:         "Robin Rager (814) 863-0435" 
Subject:      Worksite Health Promotion Incentives Update

  - - The original note follows - -

             ³                   ³                   ³
             ³                   ³                   ³
   9/9/94   \³/     UPDATE !!   \³/     UPDATE !!   \³/   9/9/94
             ³                   ³                   ³


            WORKSITE HEALTH PROMOTION FINANCIAL INCENTIVES
                 IN THE HEALTH CARE REFORM LEGISLATION


           FROM THE WORKSITE HEALTH PROMOTION ALLIANCE....

STATUS OF LEGISLATION:

Following a grueling debate over the National Crime Bill, both
the U.S. House and Senate recessed on August 26 and returned to
Washington after Labor Day.  While it appears unlikely that
Congress will pass any broad-scale health reform legislation this
year, there is still a substantial chance that an incremental
measure focused on insurance market reform could be approved
before adjournment.

While the details of the incremental reform proposal is not yet
known, some form of community rating is expected to be included
in this package.  For this reason, we must continue to strive for
worksite health promotion incentives.

WHAT YOU CAN DO TO HELP:

Call or write your Members of Congress to ask them to ensure that
incentives for worksite health promotion are included in any
health reform legislation.  Stress the following points:

ªIf community rating is used in the health care plan,
investments at the worksite will have no effect on an
employer's health care costs regardless of the effectiveness
of these programs in reducing the demand for health care
services.  Therefore, it is essential, if the legislation
proposes a community rating system, that financial
incentives be included to encourage employers to maintain
and implement these worthwhile programs.

ªIncentives for worksite wellness programs enjoy broad bi-
partisan support and were included in virtually every health
reform bill that has been considered by Congress.  Over
thirty-five health organizations and numerous businesses
also support this amendment.

ªThese financial incentives must be provided for ALL
employers, regardless of the size of their employee
population.  Failure to provide incentives regardless of
company size discriminates against small businesses and
their employees.

While it is important for us to contact as many Members as
possible, the Members on the next page have been identified as
key players in the health reform debate and/or supporters of
worksite health promotion.  We urge as many groups as possible to
contact each of these Members by letter or phone.  Please keep us
informed of any feedback you receive from these offices.  It
helps the Worksite Health Promotion Alliance to focus its
legislative efforts in the most efficient manner.

                 *      *      *      *      *

For further information about these activities contact Bob Waters
at (202) 857-6398 or Lynn Frendt Shotwell at (202) 857-6351.
Fax: (202) 857-6395.

----------------------------------------------------------------------

                   U.S. SENATORS AND REPRESENTATIVES

Senators may be reached by dialing (202) 224 + extension below.

Representatives may be reached by dialing (202) 225 + extension below.


SENATORS

                         Ext.

Christopher Bond (R-MO)  5721
David Boren (D-OK)       4721
Bill Bradley (D-NJ)      3224
John Breaux (D-LA)       4623
John Chafee (R-RI)       2921
William Cohen (R-ME)     2523
Kent Conrad (D-ND)       2043
John Danforth (R-MO)     6154
Tom Daschle (D-SD)       2321
Bob Dole (R-KS)          6521
Dave Durenberger (R-MN)  3244
Dianne Feinstein (D-CA)  3841
Tom Harkin (D-IA)        3254
Mark Hatfield (D-OR)     3753
Jim Jeffords (R-VT)      5141
Nancy Kassebaum (R-KS)   4774
Ted Kennedy (D-MA)       4543
Bob Kerrey (D-NE)        6551
John Kerry (D-MA)        2742
Herb Kohl (D-WI)         5653
Carl Levin (D-MI)        6221
Joe Lieberman (D-CT)     4041
Harlan Mathews (D-TN)    4944
George Mitchell (D-ME)   5344
Jay Rockefeller (D-WV)   6472
Paul Simon (D-IL)        2152
Arlen Specter (D-PA)     4254
Harris Wofford (D-PA)    6324


REPRESENTATIVES

                              Ext.

Michael Bilirakis (R-FL)      5755
David Bonior (D-MI)           4511
Sherrod Brown (D-OH)          3401
Benjamin Cardin (D-MD)        4016
John Dingell (D-MI)           4071
William Ford (D-MI)           6261
Richard Gephardt (D-MO)       2671
Sam Gibbons (D-FL)            3376
Peter Hoekstra (R-MI)         4401
Dale Kildee (D-MI)            3611
Sander Levin (D-MI)           4961
J. Roy Rowland (D-GA)         6531
Fortney Pete Stark (D-CA)     5065
Gerry  Studds (D-MA)          3111
Henry Waxman (D-CA)           3976
===========================================================
==============
#276
Date:         Tue, 13 Sep 1994 10:02:15 -0700
From:         Mary Annese 
Subject:      Community Education RE: Health Care Reform

I am working with several community-based organizations in collaboration
with other health related, grant-funded projects in putting together a
curriculum for community organizing and mobilization around the issues of
health care reform - specifically how HCR impacts communities of color
and other populations that historically have been marginalized by the
current health care system.  The curriculum will include an educational
component on HCR as well as training in how to mobilize communities to be
strong voices in the HCR arena.  If anyone has already accomplished this
task could you please send me your suggestions.  I would appreciate your
assistance.  Also, has anyone heard where there would be funding
available to do such work?  We are trying to keep from being tied into a
major institution so that this becomes solely a community effort.  You
can reach me at:        Mary F. Annese
                        1265 So. Main St., Suite 300
                        Seattle, WA  98144
                        (206) 685-4331 (voice)
                        (206) 328-2845 (fax)
                        annese@u.washington.edu (e-mail)

Sincerely,
Mary

......Mary F. Annese, MPA, Project Coordinator..Health of the Public......
(206) 685-4331 (voice) ... (206) 328-2845 (fax) ... (206) 322-3305 (modem)
............."WHEN SPIDER WEBS UNITE, THEY CAN TIE UP A LION".............
===========================================================
==============
#277
Date:         Wed, 14 Sep 1994 14:23:59 EDT
From:         "Jean Byrne, PhD" 
Subject:      Re: Journal of Health Psychology
In-Reply-To:  Message of Tue,
              6 Sep 1994 16:00:17 GMT from 

Re: HPQ
      I would like to receive a copy of Health Psychology Quarterly when it is
published.  My address is Jean Byrne, Health Education, 316 White Hall, Kent
State University, Kent Ohio 44242.  Thank you.
===========================================================
==============
#278
Date:         Sat, 17 Sep 1994 11:02:05 GMT+0200
From:         " ANSA.OJANLATVA@UTU.FI" 
Subject:      any journals of patient oraganization --which you know of?

Our library information specialist cannot find any journal(s) which might be
directed to patient information from a patient's point of view. I was under the
impression that there was one already; laws of patient rights being passed I
would expect there'll be one... Does anyone know of one? Ansa.


Ansa Ojanlatva, PhD, CHES, CSE       Internet: ansa.ojanlatva@sara.cc.utu.fi
Department of Public Health
University of Turku
Lemminkaisenkatu 1
20520 Turku/Finland

tel. +358-21-633 8513           +358-21-633 81 (operator)
                                FAX  +358-21-633 8439
===========================================================
==============
#279
Date:         Sat, 17 Sep 1994 21:33:28 -0500
From:         00jkclark@BSUVC.BSU.EDU
Subject:      Re: Worksite Health Promotion Incentives Update

I am trying to learn how to connect with a source on Internet that provides
health information on different countries.  Anyone who can help with this
effort please send information to 00JKCLARK@buvc.bsu.edu
Thanks,  Jeff Clark
===========================================================
==============
#280
Date:         Sun, 18 Sep 1994 13:45:19 -0400
From:         rhr5c@UVA.PCMAIL.VIRGINIA.EDU
Subject:      Re: any journals of patient oraganization --which you know of?

I was wondering how the meeting with Stenburg went.  Thanks for
the note.  Glad the letter was helpful.  I'm moving up the
learning curve as fast as I can.

Any help with that process is always appreciated!  Look forward
to hearing from you after you meeting with Paxton, if you think
there is anything I need to be advised of.  Thanks.

Rebecca
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#281
Date:         Mon, 19 Sep 1994 09:05:27 EDT
From:         ed smith 

Please add my name to your hedir list  (Stu Fors told me about it)...Please
say hi to Regina for me (we were colleagues 16 years ago at York College, PA)

**************************************************
Edward A. Smith, DrPH                            *
Department of Health Promotion and Behavior      *
Stegeman Hall                                    *
University of Georgia                            *
Athens, GA  30602                                *
(706) 542-4367 (office)                          *
(706) 613-2422 (home)                            *
**************************************************
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#282
Date:         Mon, 19 Sep 1994 12:59:42 -0500
From:         "Robert Pinger (Ball State University)"
<00rrpinger@BSUVC.BSU.EDU>
Subject:      Re: any journals of patient oraganization --which you know of?

Please remove my name from the HEDIR list.

00RRPINGER@BSU.EDU

THANKS.
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#283
Date:         Mon, 19 Sep 1994 17:45:52 -0700
From:         Lawrence Green 
Subject:      Re: Community Education RE: Health Care Reform
In-Reply-To:  <9409140419.AA10408@unixg.ubc.ca>

In response to your search for leads on community approach to health care
reform, you might find the article by Larry Brown (Coumbia School of
Public Health) in Health Affairs, c. 1989 or 1990, instructive if not a
bit discouraging.  --Larry Green

On Tue, 13 Sep 1994, Mary Annese wrote:

> I am working with several community-based organizations in collaboration
> with other health related, grant-funded projects in putting together a
> curriculum for community organizing and mobilization around the issues of
> health care reform - specifically how HCR impacts communities of color
> and other populations that historically have been marginalized by the
> current health care system.  The curriculum will include an educational
> component on HCR as well as training in how to mobilize communities to be
> strong voices in the HCR arena.  If anyone has already accomplished this
> task could you please send me your suggestions.  I would appreciate your
> assistance.  Also, has anyone heard where there would be funding
> available to do such work?  We are trying to keep from being tied into a
> major institution so that this becomes solely a community effort.  You
> can reach me at:        Mary F. Annese
>                         1265 So. Main St., Suite 300
>                         Seattle, WA  98144
>                         (206) 685-4331 (voice)
>                         (206) 328-2845 (fax)
>                         annese@u.washington.edu (e-mail)
>
> Sincerely,
> Mary
>
> ......Mary F. Annese, MPA, Project Coordinator..Health of the Public......
> (206) 685-4331 (voice) ... (206) 328-2845 (fax) ... (206) 322-3305 (modem)
> ............."WHEN SPIDER WEBS UNITE, THEY CAN TIE UP A
LION".............
>
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#284
Date:         Tue, 20 Sep 1994 08:58:46 -0500
From:         00jkclark@BSUVC.BSU.EDU
Subject:      address correction

My message requesting information on an internet connection to find files
on health status for different countries list an error in may address.
The correct address is:  00JKCLARK@BSUVC.BSU.EDU
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#285
Date:         Wed, 21 Sep 1994 09:28:14 -0400
From:         BENSLEY@WMICH.EDU
Subject:      Health care Reform Bills

Fellow health educators:

I am trying to obtain a summary outlining the different health care reform
bills that are currently in debate in Washington.  If anyone could forward me
a reference of where to get this info, I would greatly appreciate it.  Better
yet, if anyone has this info readily available and would be willing to send
or fax a copy to me, I would be grateful.  Thanks for your help.

Bob Bensley

fax (616) 387-2704
phone (616) 387-3081

4024 Gary Center
HPER Department
Western Michigan University
Kalamazoo, MI 49008
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#286
Date:         Wed, 21 Sep 1994 15:50:20 EDT
From:         "mark g. wilson" 
Subject:      H.E list

Please add my name to the health education network. I have heard great
things about it!  Thanks.


Mark G. Wilson, HSD
Dept. Health Promotion & Behavior
Stegeman Hall
University of Georgia
Athens, GA   30602
706-542-3313
mwilson@uga.cc.uga.edu
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==============
#287
Date:         Wed, 28 Sep 1994 17:26:40 CST
From:         Kenneth McLeroy

Subject:      Position Openings

        The Department of Health Promotion Sciences at the University of
Oklahoma College of Public Health will have 3 new positions to be filled in
1994/95. Two of the postitions will be tenure track at the assistant/associate
professor level, and 1 position will be a clinical (non-tenure) position. A
formal job announcement will be released on HEDIR shortly. For additional
information contact:

        Kenneth R. McLeroy, Ph.D.
        Professor and Chair
        Health Promotion Sciences
        College of Public Health
        University of Oklahoma
        Oklahoma City, OK 73190
        (405) 271-299 (fax)
        Kenneth-McLeroy@UOKHSC.Edu (internet)
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#288
Date:         Fri, 30 Sep 1994 10:10:00 EDT
From:         dl16 
Subject:      Invitation to participate in an intergenerational health
              promotion grant

     I am submitting a proposal to AoA to develop the Southern
Regional Training Program to develop the Adult Health &
Development Program (AHDP) at colleges, universities and high
schools. Priority will be given to those sites that serve older
minority community members and students.

     The grant, if awarded, would have two phases. A two day
 Workshop in June 1995 would acquaint administrators with the AHDP, payoffs,
barriers, and requirements (facilities, equipment, staff, source of
student-staffers, and older adult members). The rationale is that only
administrators can implement a new program-course.

     Following that a four day Faculty Workshop in October would
train potential directors. The bottom line would be to start up
 AHDP in the spring 1996, and maintain it. The rationale
is that the director needs to be trained in the theory and methods
of the AHDP enabling him or her to train staffers, administer the
Program, conduct research, etc.

     The AHDP is 22 year old intergenerational health promotion
and rehabilitation program at the University of Maryland. It is an
academic course (Health 487), medical school elective, and
partially self-supporting. The key is that students, volunteers,
and high school students (called staffers) are trained to work on
a one-to-one basis with older institutionalized and non-
institutionalized adults (called members) to improve their
health and well-being through physical and social activities, and health
education. The AHDP has spread to over 10 universities in the U.S. and Israel.

     If interested a letter of involvement from a responsible
administrator should be faxed immediately to: Dr. Dan Leviton at
(301) 314-9167. The letter should read:

Dear Dr. Leviton:

     The (your site) wishes to be involved in the development of
an Adult Health & Development Program here. Should the
Administration on Aging grant be awarded we shall look forward to
participating in the Administrators Training Workshop scheduled
for June 5-6, 1995, in Columbia, SC.

                              Signed

     For those administrators traveling more than 50 miles to
Columbia we shall provide a maximum of $200 for travel, hotel, and
per diem.

     Please call me at (301) 431-3733 if you have questions. Act
quickly - the proposal must be submitted by Oct. 7th. Thank you.



Daniel LEVITON
Email:Daniel_LEVITON@umail.umd.edu (dl16)
Phone:(301) 405-2528
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#289
Date:         Fri, 30 Sep 1994 10:38:42 CDT
From:         "Dr, Bryan Williams" 
Subject:      Re: Position Openings
In-Reply-To:  Message of Wed,
              28 Sep 1994 17:26:40 CST from
              

                                UNIQUE ASSISTANTSHIP OPPORTUNITY

 Please notify your students of the opportunity to work on a project with the
 University of Arkansas Medical School. This project will seek to train physici
ans in the special health care needs of the poor, under served, rural populatio
ns. The Health Education Projects Office at the University of Arkansas will dev
elop a curriculum for talented at risk youth who are interested in health-relat
ed professions. The primary emphasis of this curriculum will be to "home grow"
sensitive health care professionals so as to better meet the future needs of
at risk populations. The assistantship will involve coordination of the curricu
lum development process and implementation of the curriculum. It begins January
1995. Applicants will be interviewed at A.S.H.A. AND A.P.H.A.. If you know
some
one who might be interested contact Dr. Mike Young @ (501) 575-5639.