With deadlines in
Jan Feb
Mar Apr
May Jun
Jul Aug
Sep Oct
Nov Dec
Educating for Personal and Social Responsibility: Deepening
Student and Campus Commitments
October 1-3, 2009
Minneapolis, Minnesota
Deadline for submission of proposals:
January 30, 2009
This
conference will bring together faculty, student affairs
personnel, academic administrators, students, and others to explore
how to move education for personal and social responsibility to the
center of institutional culture and academic practice.
AAC&U's Network for Academic Renewal
invites proposals for sessions on research, models, and
promising practices that help students - and institutions - build
these capacities.
The 25th
Anniversary of the Annual Conference on Distance Teaching & Learning
August 4-7, 2009
Madison, Wisconsin
Sponsored by the University of Wisconsin-Madison School of
Education
Deadline: All proposals must be
submitted online at
http://www.uwex.edu/disted/conference by January 20, 2009.
We invite you to submit a proposal to present
at the 25th Annual Conference on Distance Teaching & Learning.
Share your expertise and experience
in the application of technology to the teaching and learning
process
Lead sessions on the planning and
management of distance education programs
Demonstrate your successful course
and/or training material to others
Guide discussions among colleagues
The 2009 conference program will offer more
than 150 presentations to attendees in a wide variety of formats
including Workshops, Information Sessions, Roundtable Discussions,
Course Design Demos, and e-Poster Sessions. NEW formats this year
include Blended Workshops, Point/Counterpoint Discussions, and
Author Discussions. See our Web site for more information on all of
these formats in addition to the proposal review criteria. We hope
you are able to join us next year at the 25th anniversary
celebration of this annual conference on distance education and
training.
2009 Washington Symposium and Capitol
Hill Poster Session
March 30-31, 2009
The National Center for Science and Civic
Engagement (NCSCE) invites applications for the annual Washington
Symposium, planned for March 30-31, 2009.
The event will be co-hosted by the University of Maryland
with support from the Dean for Undergraduate Studies, the Vice
President for Research, and the College of Chemical and Life
Sciences.
Applications may be accessed at the Symposium webpage, http://www.sencer.net/Outreach/dcsymposium09.cfm, and will be accepted on a rolling basis.
Reading Between
the Lives: Enhancing Students' Engagement with Reading
March 5, 2009
The Pyle Center
UW-Madison
Deadline: Feb 2, 2009
This free, one-day conference, sponsored by
OPID, will bring together UW-System educators from across the
disciplines to talk, think, and strategize about our students and
their challenges with reading. The keynote speaker will be Dr. Corey
Anton, Associate Professor in Communication at Grand Valley State
University. Dr. Anton is the author of Selfhood and Authenticity,
and winner of the Erving Goffman Award for Outstanding Scholarship
in the Ecology of Social interaction, presented by the Media Ecology
Association.
For more information:
http://www.uwp.edu/departments/teaching.center/linked_docs/Reading_Between_the_Lives_Call.pdf
To submit a proposal:
http://remark.uwp.edu/scripts/rws4.pl?FORM=RBL_Call_for_Submission-Registration
Suggested Presentation Topics include but are
not limited to the following:
What to do When Students Don’t Read
Best Practices in the (Fill in the
Discipline) Classroom
What Happens When Students Need Help
but Don’t Ask?
Reading in the Multicultural
Classroom
Building Academic Literacy Through
Online Discussion Forums
What Students Need to Know About
Reading in College
Self-reflection and Collaboration on
Classroom Practices in Reading
Developing Comprehension Strategies
for Constructing Meaning
Use of Higher-level Questions
(Application, Synthesis, Evaluation)
Critical and Creative Thinking
Please direct any questions to:
Christine M. Tutlewski
Interim Coordinator, Learning Assistance
University of Wisconsin-Parkside
262-595-2001
9th Annual MERLOT
International Conference: Teaching and Learning in a Networked World
August 13-17, 2009
Doubletree Hotel
San Jose, California, USA
Deadline: Monday, February 16th, 2009.
The MERLOT International Conference Committee
seeks proposal submission for the ninth MERLOT International
Conference (MIC09) in San Jose, California. Devoted to faculty
development in the design, creation, utilization and evaluation of
online teaching and learning materials this conference provides
numerous opportunities to share, learn, and participate in
conversations about teaching and learning with technology.
Conference attendees span all disciplines and
the full continuum from novice to expert in the development and use
of online resources. The tracks featured this year follow the
conference theme of “Teaching and Learning in a Networked World.â€
They include:
Track 1: Innovations in Online
Teaching and Learning
Track 2: Faculty Development
Track 3: Featured Community of
Practice: Mathematics and Statistics
Track 4: Creative Collaborations
Track 5: Evaluation and Assessment of Success
Mathematics and Statistics Are the Highlighted
Communities of Practice.
While proposals from all disciplines are
welcomed and encouraged, the MIC09 Conference Committee has
highlighted the Mathematics and Statistics Communities of Practice.
The Committee encourages Mathematics and Statistics discipline
members to participate and submit proposals.
The MERLOT International Conference provides
numerous opportunities to share, learn, and participate in
conversations about teaching and learning with technology from
experts and MERLOT users from around the world. There are excellent
opportunities to network with colleagues, learn about new
technologies, and make new friends.
The conference offers a full day of
pre-conference workshops followed by two-and-one-half-days of
colleague-to-colleague presentations. The Conference also includes
Corporate Sponsor presentation and exhibits, presentations from
MERLOT Award winners, and opportunities to gather over food and
beverage. The Pre-conference activities will begin on Thursday,
August 13th, while the Conference opens with a welcome reception on
Thursday evening and ends at noon on Sunday, August 17th.
For additional information:
http://conference.merlot.org/2009/
AAC&U Conference
Integrative Learning: Addressing the Complexities
October 22-24, 2009
Atlanta, Georgia
http://www.aacu.org/meetings/integrative_learning/index.cfm
Deadline for submission of proposals: March 11, 2009
AAC&U's Network for Academic Renewal invites proposals that analyze
the purposes, designs, and institutional supports for integrative
learning; the assessment of integrative learning; and approaches to
helping students connect their learning across discrete domains of
knowledge.
Developing students' ability to integrate and apply learning is an
important piece of what makes college education relevant for today's
world. On any given day, newspaper headlines point to the need for
graduates who are sophisticated in their thinking, able to discern
complexity in situations, and motivated to continuously seek better,
more responsible solutions to problems encountered in work, in life,
and in society. Yet most students enter college unaccustomed to
addressing the complexities inherent in disciplinary and
cross-disciplinary learning, in applying their knowledge to novel
circumstances, or in engaging diverse perspectives, either in
day-to-day campus life, or in broader social, political, and
economic contexts.
This conference seeks to highlight the new importance of integrative
learning ten years into the new century. It will examine the kinds
of learning that help students develop a sense of efficacy to tackle
the deep and often entrenched problems facing us, and it will show
how campuses are documenting and deepening students' integrative
learning through assessment.
Submit your proposal online by filling in each field of the
submission form as directed. For more information, please call
202.387.3760 or write to
network@aacu.org.
We look forward to reading your proposals.
E-Learn 2009 - World Conference on
E-Learning in Corporate, Government, Healthcare, & Higher Education
October 26 - 30, 2009 - Vancouver, British Columbia - Sheraton
Vancouver Wall Centre Hotel
Submissions Deadline: April 29
E-Learn 2009 - World Conference on E-Learning
in Corporate, Government, Healthcare, & Higher Education is an
international conference organized by the Association for the
Advancement of Computing in Education (AACE) and co-sponsored by the
International Journal on E-Learning.
This annual conference serves as a
multi-disciplinary forum for the exchange of information on
research, development, and applications of all topics related to
e-Learning in the Corporate, Government, Healthcare, and Higher
Education sectors.
We invite you to attend E-Learn 2009 and submit
proposals for papers, panels, best practices, roundtables,
tutorials, workshops, posters/demonstrations, and corporate
showcases/demos. The Conference Review Policy requires that each
proposal will be peer- reviewed by three reviewers for inclusion in
the conference program, proceedings book, and CD-ROM proceedings.
For more information and the submission form, click on
http://www.aace.org/conf/elearn/call.htm
The 15th Sloan-C International Conference on Online Learning: “The Power of Online Learning: Opportunities for Tomorrow.â€
Proposals must be submitted by April 30, 2009 at
www.sloanconsortium.org/aln/cfp
We invite you to submit a proposal
for the 15th Sloan-C International Conference on Online Learning:
“The Power of Online Learning: Opportunities for Tomorrow.†The
conference strongly encourages proposals that reflect the
implications for the field of specific e-learning experience and
practices.
Proposals that address blended
learning, issues of diversity, international applications of online
learning, open educational resources and/or social networking are
especially encouraged. Last year’s conference attracted over 1100
participants to more than 180 presentations, as well as exhibits,
pre-conference workshops, keynote and plenary addresses, and a
variety of other special events.
Program Tracks:
Learning Effectiveness
Technology and Emerging Learning
Environments
Student Services and Learner
Support
Faculty Development and Support
Professional Development and
Workforce Training
Leadership and Societal Change
For complete details on online
submission of proposals, visit our Website at
www.sloanconsortium.org/aln
For more information, call
1-866-232-5834 (Toll Free), or email aln@mail.ucf.edu.
“Artists Training Artistsâ€
A Collaborative Conference on Teaching and Learning Through the Arts
We are pleased to invite you to submit a proposal to present for the
upcoming conference, entitled “Artists Training Artists – A
Collaborative Conference on Teaching and Learning Through the Arts.â€
This conference will be held June 10-12, 2009 at the Noel
Center for the Arts on the campus of the University of
Wisconsin-Stevens Point.
The College of Fine Arts and Communication at the University of
Wisconsin-Stevens Point has enjoyed a series of interdisciplinary
collaborations. These efforts have produced interesting discoveries
in teaching and learning principles. The UW System Office of
Professional and Instructional Development (OPID) recognized this
work by funding a grant for a conference exploring teaching and
learning through the arts.
This meeting will be the first of its kind to bring UW-System arts
faculty together. Participants will share best practices and build
inter-institutional and/or inter-disciplinary communities that focus
on teaching and learning through the arts.
Our guest presenters for this conference will be:
Robert Duke, Director of theCenter for Music and Human Learning at
the University of Texas-Austin.
(http://www.music.utexas.edu/directory/details.aspx?id=36)
Nancy Smith Fichter, Emeritus Professor of Dance, Florida State
University.
(http://www.rinr.fsu.edu/winter96/departments/portrait.html)
All UW-System Arts faculty are invited and encouraged to attend.
This conference will include opportunities for UW-System arts
faculty to present papers, workshops, or lead panel discussions in
the area of the Scholarship of Teaching and Learning as it applies
to the Arts. Proposals
that focus on SoTL discoveries through collaboration will be given
highest consideration.
Registration, all conference sessions, and meals will be
provided at no cost to UW-System faculty.
General Education and Assessment:
Maintaining Momentum, Achieving New Priorities
February 18-20, 2010
Seattle, Washington
www.aacu.org
Deadline
for submission of proposals: May 15, 2009
AAC&U's Network for Academic Renewal invites
proposals that highlight fresh thinking and new approaches to help
faculty, staff, and administrators maintain momentum in general
education and assessment and reaffirm a commitment to educational
quality amid mounting economic pressures and budget cuts.
Administrators, student affairs educators, and
faculty, especially now, must work together to ensure that general
education is more than an accumulated set of credits and that
assessment practices both demonstrate accomplishment and deepen
achievement. At a time when many campuses are scaling back to focus
on "essentials," the essential role of general education and
assessment cannot be overlooked.
This conference reaffirms a commitment to
engaged liberal education as the guiding principle for campus
action. The conference will draw on AAC&U's long-standing projects
and publications on general education reform including work to bring
diversity, global, and civic learning into general education and
models for advancing scientific and quantitative literacy through
real-world curricula and problem-based pedagogies.
Submit your proposal online by filling in each
field of the
submission form as directed. For more information, please call
202.387.3760 or write to network@aacu.org.
We look forward to reading your proposals.
Association of American Colleges & Universities
1818 R Street, NW
Washington, DC 20009
National Association of Biology
Teachers 2009 Professional Development Conference
November 12, 2009
Sheraton Denver
Denver, Colorado
Deadline for proposals: Midnight, May 15, 2009
The NABT Four Year University/College Section’s
Ad-hoc Research Committee invites you to submit a proposal to
present your research paper on biology education for the 2009
Professional Development Conference.
This is a refereed session.
All papers will go through blind review.
Reviews will be guided by the following criteria:
Subject/Problem:
Is there a clear focus, rationale, model, theory, or
philosophy upon which the proposal is based?
Design or Procedure:
Are the methodology, procedure, design, and organization
appropriate?
Analyses and Findings:
Do the syntheses of ideas or data analyses and findings
appear to be appropriate and complete?
Do the conclusions drawn follow from the data?
Contribution:
Do the conclusions contribute valuable insights into the
teaching/learning of biology?
General Interest:
Does the presentation promise to be of general interest
to NABT members?
The format will be a traditional presentation for
papers by individual or co-authors lasting 15 minutes each.
There will be five minutes between presentations.
PROPOSAL SUBMISSION
In e-mail text include:
Names of author(s) with organization affiliation (University,
College, School System)
Title of Submission
Abstract (up to 200 words to be used in program if selected)
Contact information for notification
Submit a PDF of the Proposal as an attachment
(maximum five pages including references).
The body of the proposal should address the criteria as used
in the review process:
1) subject/problem; 2) the design/procedure; 3) Analysis and
Findings; 4) Contribution; and 5) General Interest.
Proposals should be word processed using a 12 font,
single-spaced, with 1†margins format.
WHERE TO SUBMIT PROPOSALS
Send your completed proposal document to
cenvired@louisville.edu with NABT research proposal in the
subject heading. Members
of the Ad-hoc Research Committee will send copies of your document
without names and affiliation to two reviewers.
After review, committee members will select proposals with
the highest scores for acceptance in the 2009 NABT Professional
Conference Research Symposium
DATES
The proposal submission deadline is midnight on May 15, 2009.
Blind review will take place in May and June with final
selection by June 15, 2009.
Submitters will be notified of acceptance or denial by July
22, 2009. All presenters
are required to register for the conference and provide a manuscript
for distribution.
The 2nd Annual
SoTL Commons Conference: An International Conference for the
Scholarship of Teaching & Learning
March 11-13, 2009
Georgia Southern University
Statesboro, Georgia
http://academics.georgiasouthern.edu/ijsotl/conference/2009/index.htm
Early registration is open and the online submission of proposals
period ends on October 15, 2008.
Keynote speakers will be Randy Bass (Georgetown
University), Kathy Takayama (Brown University), and Laurie Richlin
(Charles Drew University of Medicine and Health Science).
The current issue of International Journal for
the Scholarship of Teaching & Learning (IJ-SoTL) is online at
http://academics.georgiasouthern.edu/ijsotl/v2n2.html
The 2nd
International Symposium on Academic Globalization: AG 2009
Orlando, Florida
July 10th - 13th, 2009
Deadlines: Papers/Abstracts Submissions
and Invited Sessions Proposals: October 28, 2008
Camera-ready, full papers:
February 11, 2009
All Submitted papers/abstracts will go through
three reviewing processes: (1) double-blind (at least three
reviewers), (2) non-blind, and (3) participative peer reviews. These
three kinds of review will support the selection process of those
papers/abstracts that will be accepted for their presentation at the
conference, as well as those to be selected for their publication in
JSCI Journal.
Authors of accepted papers who registered in
the conference can have access to the evaluations and possible
feedback provided by the reviewers who recommended the acceptance of
their papers/abstracts, so they can accordingly improve the final
version of their papers. Non-registered authors will not have access
to the reviews of their respective submissions.
Awards will be granted to the best paper of
those presented at each session. From these session's best papers,
the best 10%-20% of the papers presented at the conference will be
invited to adapt their papers for their publication in the Journal
of Systemics, Cybernetics and Informatics.
Also, we would like to invite you to organize
an invited session related to a topic of your research interest. If
you are interested in organizing an invited session, please, fill
out the respective form provided in the conference web page. We will
send you a password, so you can include and modify papers in your
invited session.
OPID’s Annual
Spring Conference: Pedagogies of Hope: Inspiring, Understanding, and
Assessing Student Learning
Apr 17-18, 2009
Hyatt Regency Hotel
Deadline for proposals is Dec. 22,
2008.
Click
here
for the RFP form.
We are pleased to invite you to submit a
proposal to present a paper, workshop or panel discussion for OPID's
annual Spring Conference, which will be held at the Hyatt Regency
Hotel in Milwaukee on Friday and Saturday, April 17 and 18, 2009.
This year's theme is "Pedagogies of Hope:
Inspiring, Understanding, and Assessing Student Learning," which
invokes optimistically looking to the future as the UW System
embraces initiatives devoted to liberal education, inclusive
excellence, and technology.
In addition to presentations of individual
projects, campus initiatives, and institutional collaborations,
recent work in the UW System on threshold concepts, signature
pedagogies and media matters (digital storytelling and second life)
will make up the conference program, as well as the keynote speaker,
Professor Melissa Harris-Lacewell. Professor Harris-Lacewell is
Associate Professor of Politics and African American Studies at
Princeton University. Her academic research interests include the
study of African American political thought, black religious ideas
and practice, and social and clinical psychology. She is the
author of the award-winning book, Barbershops, Bibles, and BET:
Everyday Talk and Black Political Thought. Professor
Harris-Lacewell's creative and dynamic teaching is also motivated by
the practical political and racial issues of our time. Her
presence at this conference will foreground the UW System's
commitment to addressing the challenges facing contemporary
students, recognizing the multiple influences on student learning in
the classroom and the importance of investigating them.
We are excited about our Spring Conference and
hope you will join us. Additional highlights of plenary
sessions, workshops and the conference schedule will be forthcoming
once they are confirmed.