From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Academic journal
The
Journal of Economic Education
(
JEE
) offers original
peer-reviewed
articles on teaching economics. The inaugural issue appeared in the fall of 1969. At the time, G.L. Bach (
Stanford University
) wrote in the
American Economic Review Papers and Proceedings
(1971) that the
JEE
was to be the forum for scholarly work in economic education, primarily at the undergraduate level in colleges and universities, but including junior colleges and, to some extent, the high schools.
In the early days, the Council for Economic Education (then call the Joint Council and later the National Council) oversaw publication of the
JEE
, and members of the
American Economic Association
Committee on Economic Education served as the editorial board, with Henry Villard (City University of New York) serving as editor. The
Council for Economic Education
assigned the
JEE
copyright and publishing responsibility to the nonprofit Heldref Publications in 1981. The Council, however, retained responsibility for appointing the editor and providing financial support to the editorial office.
In 1983, Donald Paden (
University of Illinois
) became editor when the
JEE
expanded to a quarterly publication. Kalman Goldberg (
Bradley University
) became editor in 1986. The editorial offices moved to
Indiana University
in 1989, when William Becker became editor. Late in 2009, William Walstad (
University of Nebraska at Lincoln
) became editor and Heldref sold the
JEE
to the for-profit
Taylor & Francis Group
.
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