K12Online 2008 Call for Proposals

We are pleased to announce the call for proposals for the third annual “K12 Online Conference” for educators around the world interested in the use of web 2.0 tools in classrooms and professional practice. This year’s conference is scheduled for October 20-24 and October 27-31 of 2008, and will include a pre-conference keynote during the week of October 13. The conference theme for 2008 is “Amplifying Possibilities.” Participation in the conference (as in the past) is entirely free. Conference materials are published in English and available for worldwide distribution and use under a Creative Commons license. Some changes in the requirements for presentations are being made this year and are detailed below. The deadline for proposal submission is June 23, 2008. Selected presentations will be announced at NECC 2008 in San Antonio, Texas, USA. #

  • » What does research in learning science, instructional design, informal learning, and other fields tell us about today’s learner and their success?
  • » What design features must teachers incorporate into their instructional activities to support meaningful learning?
  • » What is the role of assessment in today’s changing classroom? How should assessment be structured to meaningfully assess student acheivement in the context of the modern classroom?
Strand B: Leading the Change #

  • 1. Presentations must be a single media file of twenty minutes or less in length.
  • 2. Presentations must be submitted in a downloadable and convertable file format (mp3, mov, WMV, FLV, m4a, or m4v.) Presenters wanting to use an alternative format should contact their respective strand convener in advance.
  • 3. Presentations are due two weeks prior to the week the relevant strand begins. (Week 1 presentations are due Monday, October 6, Week 2 presentations are due Monday, October 13.)
  • 4. Presentations must be submitted only one time and on time. Early submissions are welcomed! Repeat submissions (with changes and additional edits) will not be accepted. Presenters should proof carefully before submitting!
  • 5. All presentations will be shared under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported license.
The following are optional but encouraged presentation elements: #

  • 1. Prior to September 13th, presenters are invited to submit a “teaser” (maximum video or audio file length: 3 minutes) about their presentation. This can be any type of online artifact and does not have to be downloadable. Examples may include videos, animations, posters, audio interviews, etc.
    • » In addition to marketing the presentation, teasers can be designed to encourage and solicit community input related to the presentation topic in advance of the presentation submission deadline.
    • » View teaser examples from 2007 at http://k12online07.wikispaces.com/Teasers
  • 2. Supplementary materials supporting presentations are welcomed. These can be wikis with supporting material links, linked examples of student projects, school district exemplary initiatives, social bookmarking collections, and/or other related content.
  • 3. Follow-up projects and/or live interaction opportunities for conference presentations which further amplify the possibilities of the presentation topic may be included. (This can include sharing and building of content prior to, during and after the conference.)
As you draft your proposal, you may wish to consider the presentation topics listed below which were suggested in the comments on the K12 Online Conference Blog: #

  • » Special needs education
  • » Creative Commons, Intellectual Property, Copyright and Fair Use
  • » Student voices
  • » Community involvement
  • » Games in education
  • » Specific ideas, tips, mini lessons centered on pedagogical use of web 2.0 tools
  • » Overcoming institutional inertia and resistance
  • » Aligning Web 2.0 and other projects to national standards
  • » Getting your message across
  • » How Web 2.0 can assist those with disabilities
  • » ePortfolios
  • » Classroom 2.0 activities at the elementary level
  • » Teacher/peer collaboration
  • » Authentic assessment
  • » Overcoming content filtering issues
  • » Navigating “open web” versus “closed web” publishing of student work
Prospective presenters are reminded that the audience of the K12 Online Conference is global in nature and diverse in their educational context. For this reason presentations and presentation materials which address issues from a variety of perspectives are welcomed. #

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