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CFP: Second International Conference on Educational Data Mining
The Second International Conference on Educational Data Mining brings together researchers from computer science, education, psychology, psychometrics, and statistics to analyze large data sets to answer educational research questions.
EDM'09 submission is now open.
http://www.educationaldatamining.org/EDM2009/

The Second International Conference on Educational Data Mining brings together researchers from computer science, education, psychology, psychometrics, and statistics to analyze large data sets to answer educational research questions.
The increase in instrumented educational software, as well as state databases of student test scores, has created large repositories of data reflecting how students learn.
The EDM conference focuses on computational approaches for using those data to address  important educational questions. The broad collection of research disciplines ensures  cross fertilization of ideas, with the central questions of educational research serving as  a unifying focus.
This Conference emerges from preceding EDM workshops at the AAAI,  AIED, ICALT, ITS, and UM conferences.

Topics of Interest
We welcome papers describing original work. Areas of interest include  but are not limited to:

  • Improving educational software. Many large educational data  sets are generated by computer software. Can we use our discoveries to improve the  software's effectiveness?
  • Domain representation. How do learners represent the domain? Does this representation shift as a result of instruction? Do different subpopulations represent the domain differently?
  • Evaluating teaching interventions. Student learning data provides a powerful  mechanism for determining which teaching actions are successful. How can we best use such data?
  • Emotion, affect, and choice. The student's level of interest  and willingness to be a partner in the educational process is critical. Can we detect when  students are bored and uninterested? What other affective states or student choices  should we track?
  • Integrating data mining and pedagogical theory. Data mining  typically involves searching a large space of models. Can we use existing educational  and psychological knowledge to better focus our search?
  • Improving teacher support. What types of assessment  information would help teachers? What types of instructional suggestions are both feasible  to generate and would be welcomed by teachers?
  • Replication studies. We are especially interested in papers that apply a previously used technique to a new domain, or that reanalyze an existing data set with a new technique.

Important Dates
* Paper submission: March 31, 2009
* Acceptance notification: May 1, 2009
* Camera ready paper: May 20, 2009
* Conference: July 1-3, 2009

Submission Types
All submissions should follow the formatting guidelines (MS Word, PDF).
http://www.educationaldatamining.org/EDM2009/uploads/edm09General/EDMGuidelines.doc

There are two types of submission:
* Full papers - Maximum of 10 pages. Should describe substantial,  unpublished work
* Young researcher: Maximum of 8 pages. Designed for graduate students and undergraduates

Submission is managed by EasyChair. You'll need to register (free and  quick procedure).
To enter the conference submission section, please click here:
 https://www.easychair.org/login.cgi?conf=edm09

Conference Organization
* Conference Chairs: Cristobal Romero Morales and Sebastian Ventura
* Program Chairs: Tiffany Barnes and Michel Desmarais

posted by Jérôme Zeiliger on 02/20/09 09:03:58
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