Workshop Emerging Web Technologies, Facing the Future of Education in conjunction with www2012 conference, Lyon Avril 2012
Workshop
half day 16th april 2012, afternoon, Lyon, France
Workshop in conjunction with www2012
conference
This workshop will be held in connection with LiLe 2012
Workshop topic and themes
The Net Generation, Y Generation, C Generation, digital
natives... there are many terms - several controversial - used
to name youth who were born into a world where the Internet is
of great importance. These terms issue from a huge body of
studies that focus on youth and digital culture (CEFRIO, 2011;
Ito et al., 2008; Lenhart et al., 2008), on the emerging
knowledge society (UNESCO 2005) and that illustrate a wide
consensus on how new media are altering the way youth learn and
socialize. They demonstrate that teachers face a new audience
engaged in tagging, searching, gaming, multitasking, social
networking and collaborating through Web 2.0-related activities.
Indeed, youth appear more engaged in digital networks where
they can create content, share knowledge and expertise, access
cultural artefacts or remix existing material, realizing the
Papert's prophecy (1980).
Emerging Web technologies clearly offer new opportunities to
learners but there are surprisingly few examples of such uses at
school and little evidence of their impact in education.
Although teachers are not entirely out of this movement as a
growing number of them are engaged in online networks that
foster professional development and where they share "living"
teaching resources (Gueudet et al. 2011) and best practices,
most schools are still focused on training autonomous
problem-solvers whereas there is a growing need for creativity,
teamwork and collaboration skills within multidisciplinary
networks in order to solve the kind of problems faced by an
increasingly complex world. Thus, there is a growing gap
separating youth digital culture from mainstream academic school
culture.
In line with the www2012
conference, this workshop aims at
understanding the real impact of emerging Web technologies in
transforming education. It will offer researchers and
practicioners the opportunity to share their knowledge and
expertise in putting forward new models of teaching and learning
in the Internet Age. The aim is to bridge the gap between youth
digital culture and school culture in order to face the new and
complex challenges being addressed by educators in the knowledge
society. The workshop will be complementary to LiLe 2012.
Papers focusing on concrete applications of emerging Web
technologies are particularly welcome, as well as more
theoretical and position position papers with a special focus on
introducing social media in education.
References
CEFRIO. (2011). Les "C" en tant que citoyens. Génération C,
1(1).
Gueudet, G., Pepin, B., & Trouche, L. (eds.) (2011). From
Textbooks to ‘Lived' Resources: Mathematics Curriculum Materials
and Teacher Documentation, New York, Springer.
Ito, M., Horst, H., Bittanti, M., Boyd, D., Herr-Stephenson, B.,
Lange, P., & Robinson, L. (2008). Living and Learning with
New Media: Summary of Findings from the Digital Youth Project.
Chicago: MacArthur Foundation.
Lenhart, A., Kahne, J., Middaugh, E., Rankin Macgill, A., Evans,
C., & Vitak, J. (2008). Teens, Video Games and Civics Pew
Internet and American Life Project. Washington, DC: Pew Research
Center.
Papert, S. (1980). Mindstorms: Children, computers, and powerful
ideas. NY: Basic Books.
UNESCO (2005). Towards knowledge societies (UNESCO World
Report). Retrieved June, 26th, 2011, from http://www.unesco.org/en/worldreport
Chairs
Vladan
Devedzic, FOS - School of Business
Administration, University of Belgrade, Serbia
Vladan Devedzic is a Professor of Computer Science with the
Department of Software Engineering, FON - School of Business
Administration, University of Belgrade. His current professional
and research interests include knowledge modeling, software
engineering, and application of artificial intelligence to
education. He is a member of the International Society for
Artificial Intelligence in Education (AIED). So far, he has
published about 320 research papers, both at prestigeous
research journals and at international conferences, and 3
monographs for Springer. He has organized and chaired one
workshop at an international conference himself (Workshop on
Intelligence and Technology in Educational Applications, ITEA
2002, Innsbruck, Austria, February 2002), ad has been a program
co-chair at three other international conferences/workshops
(International Conference on Intelligent Tutoring Systems, ITS
2004 (30 August-03 September 2004, Maceió-Alagoas, Brazil),
Workshop on Applications of Semantic Web Technologies for
Web-based ITS, SW-EL'04: Semantic Web for E-Learning, August 30,
2004; Intelligence and Technology in Educational Applications
2004, Special Session at the Eighth International Conference on
Knowledge-Based Intelligent Information & Engineering
Systems (KES2004), Wellington, New Zealand, September 2004; 3rd
IEEE International Conference on Advanced Learning Technologies
(ICALT 2003), Athens, Greece, July 9-11, 2003).
Denis
Gillet, Ecole Polytechnique Fédérale
de Lausanne, Switzerland
Denis Gillet leads the React interdisciplinary research Group
at the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology in Lausanne (EPFL).
His research interests include Technologies Enhanced Learning
(TEL), Human-Computer Interaction (HCI), Engineering Education,
as well as Coordination of Distributed Systems. His current
research focus is on personal learning environments and
contextual recommender systems, with applications to on-line
engineering education and knowledge management. Dr. Gillet is an
Executive of the STELLAR European Network of Excellence on
Technology Enhanced Learning. He has also a leading position in
the ROLE European Integrated Project on Responsive Open Learning
Environments. Dr. Gillet is Associate Editor of the IEEE
Transactions on Learning Technoloigies (TLT) and of the
International Journal of Technology Enhanced Learning. He was
Programme Chair of the last European Conference on Technology
Enhanced Learning (EC-TEL'11).
Eric
Sanchez, EducTice-S2HEP, Institut
français de l'Education, Ecole Normale Supérieure de Lyon,
France
Eric Sanchez is Associate Professor, head of EducTice, a research
team of the French Institute for Education (Ecole Normale
Supérieure de Lyon). He is also adjunct Professor at the
University of Sherbrooke (Canada). His research relates to the use
of ICT for educational purposes (simulation, serious games and
elearning). He teaches the educational uses of ICT in teachers
training programs (Universities of Lyon, Montpellier and
Sherbrooke). He is member of different researchers associations
(IFIP, ATIEF, ACFAS) and expert for the European Commission (KA3
ICT LLP).
He has published many papers in research journals and
international conferences and has been involved in many
conference program and organization committees (IIGWE 2011
Monbasa,Kenya, EIAH 2011, Mons, Belgium, ESERA 2011, Lyon,
Serious Game Worshop ACFAS 2011 for the last year)
Program committee
Christophe Batier, Université Lyon 1, France
Eric Bruillard, STEF, ENS de Cachan, IFé, France
Peter Brusilovsky, School of Information Sciences,
University of Pittsburgh, USA
Carlos Delgado Kloos, Universidad Carlos III de Madrid,
Spain
Erik Duval, Katholieke Universiteit Leuven (Belgium)
Valérie Emin, EducTice-S2HEP, IFE (ENSL), France
Jean Gabin Ntebuse, Université de Sherbrooke, Qc, Canada
Monique Grandbastien, Université Henri Poincaré Nancy1,
France
Jelena Jovanovic, FOS - University of Belgrade, Serbia
Elise Lavoué, Université Jean Moulin Lyon 3, France
Agathe Merceron, Beuth University of Applied Sciences
Berlin, Germany
Christine Michel, INSA-Lyon, France
Michael Power, Université Laval à Québec, Qc, Canada
Milan Stankovic, hypios.com & Universite Paris-Sorbonne
IV, Paris, France.
Luc Trouche, EducTice, IFE (ENSL), France
Steeve Wheeler, University of Plymouth, UK
Martin Wolpers, Fraunhofer-Institut für Angewandte
Informationstechnik FIT, Sankt Augustin, Germany
Call for Papers Submission format: short papers
(up to 3 pages) or full papers (up to
6 pages)
All submissions must be written in English and must be formatted
according to the ACM
format.
Please submit your contributions electronically in PDF format
via the EWFE2012 submission system at https://www.easychair.org/conferences/?conf=ewfe2012.
Papers will be evaluated according to their significance,
originality, technical content, style, clarity, and relevance to
the workshop. At least one author of each accepted paper is
expected to attend the workshop.
Email contact : ewfe2012@easychair.org
Important dates 10 February 2012 : Abstract submission deadline for
full & short research paper 19 February 2012 (extended) : Full & short
research paper submission deadline
05 March 2012: Notification of acceptance
20 March 2012: Camera-ready paperµ
16 April 2012: Emerging Web 2012 workshop day