1st International Workshop on Collaborative Open Environments for Project-Centered Learning held in conjunction with the 2nd European Conference on Technology Enhanced Learning Crete, Greece, September 17/18, 2007 BackgroundMore and more, in an environment characterized by high mobility of students, lecturers and workforce and by the dynamics of multinational companies, “classes” or “students’ teams” are composed of persons with different competencies and backgrounds (even cultural differences may play a relevant role). This feature is considered as a valuable pedagogical addition for developing the multidisciplinary attitude of the learner. Such working environments will become more and more relevant in industry, with increasing distribution of multinational companies all over the world and with extensive adoption of partnerships and outsourcing. Increasingly, project-centered teaching approaches, often in the context of workplace learning, are adopted in the case of scientific and technical studies, where teams rather than individual students will work on a given project and where teachers’ support will often be substituted by interaction with a small group of advisors and tutors, possibly coming from different (remote) institutions and providing different competencies and approaches.Research and development in project-oriented environments are focused upon the problem of creating and managing virtual teams of persons with heterogeneous backgrounds and competencies, of assessing their entry-level skills and their ‘scientific growth’, of coordinating their collaboration as well as facilitating their personalized growth, and even of following them up after the end of their formal participation in the learning activities, when they constitute an alumni community. This approach is built upon project-centered learning and social network learning situation, which is seen as an important mechanism for breaking distance barriers and making effective use of e-learning technology. The scenarios, approaches, infrastructures and methodologies help institutions, universities and companies to establish new innovative project-centered study programs in information technology and related fields. Extensive case studies among several education and training institutions brought up the following most important technical requirements in collaborative project-oriented scenarios: top Call for PapersThe workshop focuses on current research trends in project-oriented cooperative learning solutions that aim at facilitating more dynamic and realistic learning scenarios, centered on the “learning by doing” approach. The workshop solicits submissions of high-quality research papers that propose solutions to the issues identified above. It advocates for approaches and environments for supporting knowledge co-construction, sharing and re-use, including for example functionalities for recommendations of peers, experts and resources, based on past learning experiences and interactions, and mechanisms to exchange and share information and artifacts in distributed dynamic social networks.The workshop aims at bringing together scientists and engineers who work on researching, designing and/or developing the abovementioned solutions, as well as practitioners who evaluate them in diverse real environments. Particular interest will be given to approaches built according to well-established pedagogical principles. Topics of interest include (but are not limited to) the following: Workshop presentations will only include full papers (up to 10 pages). Authors may submit full papers as well as extended abstracts (approx. 2 pages) and draft papers that will subsequently (upon preliminary acceptance) be extended and resubmitted. They must correspond to the EC-TEL conference format requirements, in Springer LNCS (http://www.springer.de/comp/lncs/index.html). All accepted papers must be presented by one of the authors. Workshop attendees need to register for the main EC-TEL conference. All accepted papers will be published online. All submissions should be sent by e-mail to iofciu @ l3s. de. top Workshop Structure
It is foreseen that the workshop will be highly interactive and engage participants in fruitful discussions on its topics. Towards this aim, accepted papers will be first clustered according to the topics addressed (3-4 such clusters are foreseen for a 1-day workshop). Each such session will contain no more than 3 papers, each of them to be presented by one of its authors (workshop participants will be handed out the full versions of the papers). The duration of the presentation of each full paper will be about 20 minutes plus 10 minutes for discussions. It is expected that the duration of each workshop’s session will be around 90minutes. Authors will be asked to follow a structured template for their presentation, focusing on the problem addressed in their approach, the methodology followed, and the results of their work. Each workshop session will be coordinated by a facilitator (session chair), who will be an expert on the topics discussed in the particular session. There will be and invited speaker at the beginning of the workshop who will give an influential talk (keynote speech) about their work and/or vision.A closing panel session, a panel summarizing the outcome of the workshop and determining future activities has been also foreseen. Important Dates
July 15, 2007: workshop paper submission deadline Organization
Workshop Chairs Stefano Ceri, Politenico di Milano, Italy Program Committee Stefano Ceri, Politenico di Milano, Italy | |
















