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Peggy
Stanfield:
Nutrition author began with learning modules
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Peggy
Stanfield:
Nutrition author

Stanfield
would like TAA's mentoring program expanded, with more senior
authors helping newer authors.
"I realize this takes a lot of time and commitment from the senior
authors, who do not have a lot of time to give, but I had Dr.
Hui as my mentor, and it has saved me from many pitfalls and has
been a tremendous help," she said.
"I believe that beginning authors need that kind of assistance."
Books
Nutrition
and Diet Therapy,
1986. 4th edition 2003.
Basic Nutrition, 1987.
Mastering Medical Terminology, 1989. 2nd edition 1995.
Introduction to the Health Professions, 1990. 4th edition
2002.
Essential Medical Terminology, 1991. 3rd edition 2007.
Education
M.S.,
Montana State University
B.S., Alabama University |
As a young woman Peggy
Stanfield envisioned herself writing novels, but once she started teaching
she found textbooks in demand. "I enjoy writing very much," said Stanfield,
now retired from the College of Southern Idaho in Twin Falls and author
of five books. "Sometimes it's not easy, but I enjoy it."
Stanfield wrote
her first book, Nutrition and Diet Therapy, in its third edition
in 1997, during her second year at Southern Idaho. "When I started teaching
in the nursing department I discovered that students were unable to
learn from the large books I was using," Stanfield said. For each chapter,
she wrote modules of information students needed to know and a series
of progress checks. At the end of a module she included a post-test.
"One day a salesman
from Wadsworth was in my office and asked to look at some of the modules
on my desk," she said. "He said his editor would be interested in seeing
them." The editor asked Stanfield to write a book of modules. He paired
her with Y.H. Hui who was teaching and writing at Humbolt State University
in California. He helped her with formatting and other basics of writing
a textbook. The result of the collaboration: A 600-page softcover textbook
with self-instructional modules for undergraduates planning a career
in nursing, nutrition and other allied health professions. It is used
for distance learning, self-paced instruction and in classrooms.
Nutrition and
Diet Therapy, originally published by Wadsworth, was later sold
to Jones & Bartlett. After its successful first run, the company decided
to publish a series. In 1987 Basic Nutrition was published, which
was intended to become the first of a nutrition series. While the book
sold, the series idea never materialized, and the book was not picked
up for another edition.
In 1990, the company
asked Stanfield to take over a book on the health professions that the
current author was not going to revise. "The book was incomplete and
outdated, and I had complained about it, but the original author did
not want to do anything about it," said Stanfield. "The editor then
asked me to rewrite it, I did, and it sells well, now being in its fourth
edition." Introduction to the Health Professions is a 400-page
softcover book for students entering the health profession but are unsure
about which field they want to go into to. The book features 60 health
professions and their scope of practice, employment opportunities, working
environment, educational requirements, future trends and earnings. "It
needs to be updated quite often because the information in these fields
is always changing," Stanfield said.
In 1989, Stanfield
wrote Mastering Medical Terminology, also based on self-instructional
modules and used for distance learning and independent study courses
as well as regular classroom instruction. Although the medical terminology
field is filled with many textbooks, Stanfield found it was easy to
break into because of the way her book was arranged. "There are so many
students in the health professions, and all of them must master medical
terminology at some time in their studies," she said. "It's not easy
to learn because the terms are taken from Greek and Latin." She said
her self-instructional book was a "niche book" and the formula "just
happened to do for students things the others were not doing." Two years
later she wrote Essential Medical Terminology as a shorter version
for students who need only one semester of basic medical terminology,
such as vocational nurses, dental hygiene majors, medical assistants
and pre-law students. An instructor's manual comes with both books and
features many case studies, flash cards, additional words, transparencies,
as well as test questions. Each book has audio tapes for learning pronunciation.
"These features are a real help for students and their instructors,"
she said.
When Stanfield started
college, there weren't many career choices for women. "You could be
a school teacher, a nurse or a secretary," she said. "I was majoring
in home economics but saw other students going off to internships at
hospitals, and I liked that idea, and decided I wanted to do that."
She said she had wanted to be a doctor but couldn't afford it, and women
were not readily accepted into medical schools then, so she went into
dietetics. She is now a registered, licensed dietitian and a certified
nutrition specialist.
She did clinical
and administrative work for hospitals in Tennessee, Texas and Idaho,
while also working as a freelance dietary consultant for nine years,
until she began teaching at the College of Southern Idaho in the department
of nursing and then the department of science and allied health. She
taught there 21 years. Her last year of teaching was at the University
of Hawaii, Manoa, in Honolulu, in the department of food science and
human nutrition. She is now professor emeritus at Southern Idaho, president
of Dietetic Resources in Twin Falls and in partnership with her former
authoring mentor Y.U. Hui at Science Technology System in West Sacramento,
California.
In 1997 Stanfield
was elected vice president of Text and Academic Authors and ascended
to the presidency in 1998, and to a second term from 2000-2002. Her
main objective as president was to help expand TAA and make it well-known
and respected throughout the country. "I want to help spread the word
about TAA, what we are about, what we can do for authors, and to expand
the membership. There are many out there who have not heard of us, nor
are they aware that it would be beneficial to them to belong to TAA,"
she said. She also wanted to do more to help new authors get started.
Workshops are a good beginning, she said.
Stanfield also wanted
to see the mentoring program by senior authors. "I realize this takes
a lot of time and commitment from the senior authors, who do not have
a lot of time to give, but I had Dr. Hui as my mentor, and it has saved
me from many pitfalls and has been a tremendous help. I believe that
beginning authors need that kind of assistance," Stanfield said. "I
also hope that in the future our contract publishing guidelines will
become the standard for all TAA authors, as I have seen many thorny
problems arise through poor contract agreements."
reported
by Kim Pawlak, 2000 |
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