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Author(s):  
Ifit Novita Sari ◽  
Hayat Hayat

The purpose of community service this time is first, helping the teacher's difficulties in writing scientific articles compiled from the results of Class Action Research (PTK) that has been done. Many results are obtained in teacher PTK and need to be published in order to be a reference for teachers and other educators. Second, for the promotion and class of teachers who have been promulgated in Permenegpan No. 16 of 2009 and Permendiknas No. 35 of 2010. Second, scientific articles written by teachers can be used for submissions for promotions and classes of teachers that have been promulgated in Permenegpan No. 16 of 2009 and Permendiknas No. 35 of 2010. Both candies require the calculation of the credit number of functional positions of teachers for the affairs of promotion and class. One of the credit figures is obtained from scientific publications. The target of this community service activity is to help teachers to hone their skills in terms of writing scientific articles and providing assistance / clinical scientific articles until published in the intended journal. The implementation of this activity is scheduled for three months, starting from: (1) giving material, (2) introducing and providing examples of scientific articles that have been published in national and international journals, (3) accompanying teachers in writing scientific papers compiled from the results of PTK, (4) helping teachers to assess the extent to which their scientific writing is worth publishing, and (5) helping to give directions to which journals will be intended to publish their work


Author(s):  
Armando Chiong

Greetings to all ENT Fellows! When I became a member of the Board of Trustees during the Presidency of Dr. Cesar Anthony Yabut in 2012, I surmised how concerned and dedicated the Board was in supporting and funding researches of fellows-- whether they were descriptive, analytical, surgical innovations and instrumentations -- through the PSO-HNS research committee. Amendments to the research paper contest guidelines were made to give way to the advent of information technology in synchronization with the electronic journal management system of the Philippine Journal of Otolaryngology Head and Neck Surgery (PJOHNS). Online review and corrections were implemented to maximize time and efforts of the judges and the authors. This was given emphasis during the administration of Dr. Wilfredo Batol in 2013. Well, these are all done for academic excellence. Under Dr. Howard Enriquez’ administration in 2014, research still remained one of the priorities of PSO-HNS. Each and every paper submitted passed through the eye of the needle of the editorial board of PJOHNS. It may be a lot of hard work and effort for the researchers, judges and editors but it is worth the hard work. PERSEVERANCE is the key! Just choose a “worth-knowing” topic and write a “worth-publishing” paper. If it is rejected, just try again. Be patient with the corrections and revisions-- in the end, the fruit of your labor is a sweet success. An ORL-HNS specialist should be equipped with this trait to really cope with the ever changing needs of our society whether it is surgically or research oriented as evidenced by our very own PJOHNS. It is with great pride and honor that I render a message in our prestigious journal. I would like to take this opportunity to express my sincere gratitude and congratulations to my colleague, Dr. Joey Lapena, and the same is true for the editorial staff and members for their never ending dedication and hard work in making a journal that is equally competitive and accepted in the 21st Century.


Author(s):  
Armando Chiong

Greetings to all! I am pleased to extend my sincere congratulations to the editors, reviewers, authors, co-authors and the rest of the hardworking and dedicated staff of the Philippine Journal of Otolaryngology – Head & Neck Surgery. As you all know my term is almost over and it was a very fruitful year. It will be more so since the PJOHNS will soon join the celebration of the PSO-HNS 60th Jubilee year on its next edition and I am sure the editorial staff is already well at work to prepare an issue worth keeping and remembering. We always hope for PJOHNS to continue its goal in documenting medical and surgical researches and clinical practices which have initiated the progress and development of ORL-HNS in the Philippines in significant ways. The articles and abstracts of the journal appropriately document the research papers basically done by our residents every year and we do hope that our consultants can still find time to help their residents to gain new knowledge, and give extensive efforts to author an article worth publishing in this journal that are at par with foreign counterparts. In our field of specialization, there is always the need to develop new concepts and strategies to keep abreast with the continuous challenges. Through the years, the PSO-HNS has developed steady progress in the field of Otorhinolaryngology. Ending this message will not be complete without mentioning and giving recognition to the editorial Board under the leadership of Dr. Jose Florencio Lapena, Jr., as well as to the authors who contributed to this particular issue. The Philippine Society of Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery is grateful to be associated with the PJOHNS. May this partnership continue and strengthen over the next 60 years!


Author(s):  
Svitlana Zubenko ◽  

Pavel Antokolsky’s took his first steps in poetry when literary life in Petersburg and Moscow was raging: new poetic circles were formed and new bright personalities appeared. The poems composed by Alexander Block, an older generation poet, were the object of general admiration. But young talents, almost of the same age as Antokolsky, such as Akhmatova, Pasternak, Mandelstam, Tsvetaeva, Mayakovsky, Yesenin, etc. represented themselves as strong, bright personalities, confident poets and competed on equal terms with the previous literary generation. However, despite his bright talent, the young poet did not consider his early works worth publishing. Many of them remained unknown until 2010 when the book «Daleko eto bylo gde-to…» («It was somewhere far away… ») was published. This book appeared as a result of exploring the poet’s archive by his descendants Andrew Toom, professor at Pernambuco State University (Brazil) and Anna Toom, professor at Touro International University (USA). P. Antokolskiy’s poetry has always been researched in the context of the Soviet poetry and it has been also believed that 1920s was the time when he started his career in literature. The researchers such as L. Anninsky, T. Beck, I. Grinberg, R. Igoshina, T. Letapurs, K. Nikitina, L. Ozerov, D. Reznikov, A. Tarasenkov, etc. also investigated the poetry by P. Antokolskiy in this context. However, the early poems of P. Antokolsky, which were published only in 2010, enable to clarify the periodization of his creative work and to distinguish the period of «apprenticeship» that took place in the 1910s. P. Antokolsky established himself as a poet in the Silver Age of the Russian poetry and at first was fascinated with symbolism, futurism and acmeism. The theme and images of P. Antokolsky's early lyrics are influenced by symbolism and above all, by O. Block's creative work. Referring to the experience of O. Block was due to the crisis of symbolism and many poetic decisions of P. Antokolsky present the imitation, which exploits various means of expression and clichéd images: mysteries, disbelief, disappointment, search for ways, functions of the poet and poetry; poetic images of the cup, blue ships, the Balaganchik and his characters, the Stranger, Her, the Therem, the steady threshold, the blue river, etc. The publication of P. Antokolsky's unknown works is an important step in creating a holistic view of his poetry and its origin, features and evolution of its development and, ultimately, the place of his creative work in the history of literature.


2018 ◽  
Vol 11 (4) ◽  
pp. 593-595
Author(s):  
Matthew J. Borneman

In addition to the suggestions made by the authors of the focal article (Lapierre et al., 2018), it is also important for academics to market themselves and keep their information up to date. As a practitioner, I sometimes end up working with interesting data sets worth publishing but lack the time and resources to complete the entire publication progress. There are also times when I am in need of a targeted intervention and would be willing to work with academic researchers in a mutually beneficial arrangement. As such, I need to be able to find you. This commentary expands on the focal article by providing some tips on how to be found by practitioners and increase the likelihood that a practitioner will contact you. Though networking is also of vital importance in this area, the authors of the focal article covered that well; as such, no further discussion of it will take place here.


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