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U-ED2001 Workshop
1st Call for Papers: U-ED2001 Workshop at AIED 2011 "Usability and Educational Technology, impact on study results"
Website: http://perso.univ-lemans.fr/~sgira/ued2011/index.html

Organizers
Roger N'Kambou, Université du Québec à Montreal, Canada
Sylvie Girard, CREN, pôle manceau Innovation en éducation, France 

DATES
Papers Submission: March 29th 2011
Review Decision: April 2nd 2011
Paper final version: May 15th 2011  
Workshop Dates: June 27th-28th 2011

Theme and goals
Research investigating how to successfully evaluate interactive pedagogical products agree on the importance of the following three dimensions [1]: • Utility: does the system enable learners to learn the concepts it was created for?
• Acceptability: is the system compatible with the user's culture, values, or the organizational structure it should be deployed into?
• Usability: is the system easy to use, understand, and reuse, without any manipulation errors or requesting for navigational help intensively?
These three dimensions have been showed to be complementary, and critical for the development of educational products that respect the culture, cognitive, pedagogical, and motor capacities of the final users: the learners or their teachers. While usability has always been a critical issue for any computer application, it is especially true with regards to software created for use in experimental studies for better learning. Indeed, intelligent tutoring systems, and any kind of technology-based pedagogical application, are very complex applications that need a high degree of adaptation to the users, and a high level of malleability by their users in order to perform the tasks they are assigned to. For instance, situations where the user is not able to perform an activity due to buttons too little to click on easily, or other usability issues, should be avoided at all cost. One major research question is raised for the purpose of this workshop's reflections: How can one believe in the validity of study results when the application supporting the experiment is source of frustration, badly used by the participants, or not well adapted to the targeted user, due to its poor usability?  

U-Ed'2011 goal is to bring new people to the AIED conference, coming from Human-Computer Interaction and Human-Robot Interaction: people more focused on the HCI side of the educational applications, especially working on the interaction techniques behind the applications, in regards to a specific public. The program committee presented below (all members agreed to contribute to the reviewing process) includes people from both HCI and AIED research communities. This is a guarantee for a high scientific quality of the workshop and also of the success of this first tentative of making these two communities interact together on challenging issues. This is an opportunity for people of CHI community to learn more about complex usability in learning environment and for AIED people to more understand CHI fundamentals (theories, methods and techniques) that may contribute to a better design and evaluation of educational software in their usability perspective.

We believe that this workshop will be of interest in the community, as a growing interest in bringing together HCI and educational issues has been developed in the past years. Several workshops have been done on specific points, with some issues on usability and learning applications, which brought a good level of attendance. For example: the "next generation of HCI and education" workshop at CHI2010 has been renewed another year for CHI2011, and a similar workshop is planned for the French EIAH 2011 conference.
 
The workshop will aim at giving more insight on different aspects of usability:
• Usability applicable for different technologies: desktop, web-based, ubiquitous, tangible, android.
• Different technology used in the software: agents, sound, affect, user-modelling, virtual/mixed reality
• How can an interdisciplinary team work together to produce software design methods that include usability principles?
• Different types of learning theories implemented: constructivism, discovery learning, serious games, etc.

Types of submission
• Paper submission: 12 pages, full-paper contribution
-Experience testimony of design process for better usability with interdisciplinary team -Study that shows the impact of usability on study results in terms of motivation, learning, reflection, meta-cognitive processes, etc... 
-Methods, guidelines, principles, and theories on specific aspects of usability for technology enhanced learning
-Studies on the application adaptation needs in terms of usability for specific user-groups.
• Demonstrations: 2 pages, demonstration at the workshop
-Demonstration of existing systems that ‘solve' usability issues in educational technologies
-Demonstration of usability problems pointed out that raise unsolved research questions. All papers must follow the AIED conference format : http://www.aied2011.canterbury.ac.nz/submissions

Program Comity
• Shazia Afzal, university of Cambridge, UK
• Ben Du Boulay, School of Informatics, University of Sussex, UK.
• Jacqueline Bourdeau, Téluq-UQAM, Canada
• Joost Broekens, Delft University of Technology, The Netherlands
• Ginevra Castellano, Queen Mary University of London, UK (not reviewer)
• Bertrand David, Laboratoire LIESP, Ecole Centrale, Lyon, France
• Elisabeth Delozanne, Université Paris 6, France
• Aude Dufresne, Université de Montréal, Canada
• Sylvie Girard, CREN, pôle manceau Innovation en éducation, France
• Judith Good, School of Informatics, University of Sussex, UK.
• Agneta Gulz, Lund University Cognitive Science, Sweden
• Magnus Haake, Lund Unversity, Sweden
• Juan Pablo Hourcade, University of Iowa, US
• Judy Kay, CHAI, university of Sidney, Australia
• Hilary Johnson, university of Bath, UK
• Richard Joiner, university of Bath, UK
• James Lester, North Carolina State University, US
• Jack Mostow, Carnegie Mellon University, US
• Roger NKambou, Université du Québec à Montreal, Canada
• Laurel Riek, University of Cambridge, UK
• Dominique SCAPIN, INRIA Rocquencourt, France
• André Tricot, Université de Toulouse 2, France
posted by Jérôme Zeiliger on 03/04/11 09:20:02
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