Monthly Archives: November 2020

Call for Chapter Proposals – Handbook of Communication and Disability

Call for Chapter Proposals

Deadline:         November 30, 2020
Book project: The Palgrave Handbook of Communication and Disability
Publisher:        Palgrave-MacMillan
Editors:            Michael S. Jeffress, PhD, Tennessee State University
Jim Ferris, PhD, University of Toledo
Joy M. Cypher, PhD, Rowan University
Julie-Ann Scott-Pollock, PhD, University of North Carolina Wilmington

We welcome proposals for original scholarship, meta-analysis studies, and theoretical essays from communication scholars who approach the topic of communication from a disability studies frame.  We desire a wide variety of methodological approaches and diverse theoretical frameworks. We invite proposals from any sub-discipline of communication studies; however, we are not seeking proposals related to representation in film, television, or print media.  We encourage proposals that explore the insectionalities of disability with race, gender, and sexual orientation, as well as the voice of disability in social movements related to social and environmental justice.

Project timeline:

11/30/2020 – Review of proposals begins
1/1/2021 – Invite contributors of selected proposals to submit full chapters for review
4/30/2021 – Deadline for first drafts
6/30/2021 – Feedback returned
9/30/2021 – Final drafts due
11/30/2021-Manuscript delivered

To submit, please send to mjeffres@tnstate.edu with “Handbook CFP” in the subject line a Word document containing your working title, abstract of no more than 200 words, and a brief bio that lists the author(s) highest earned degree and institutional affiliation.

Educational Technology, Instructional Design, and Online Learning Conferences 2020 & 2021

The following list was adapted from Clayton R. Wright’s Educational Technology and Education Conferences List #44. Please refer to Wright’s complete list for other conferences as well as each conference website for more details. Each year I attend AECT, AERA, and 1-2 other conferences. I use this list to identify what other conferences I might attend. Thus, this list is focused on my research interests and/or convenient or interesting locations. However, with COVID-19, conference travel has stopped and moved virtual in most places. Double check each conference because some more are bound to be canceled.

Educational Technology and a Few Education Conferences for December 2020 to June 2021, Edition #44

December 2020

January 2021

February 2021

March 2021

April 2021

May 2021

June 2021

July 2021

August 2021

 

September 2021

October 2021

November 2021

March 2022

June 2022

July 2022

August 2022

October 2022

February 2023

March 2023

July 2023

October 2023

  • October 17-21, 2023 Association for Educational Communications and Technology (AECT) International Convention. Doubletree by Hilton, Orlando, Florida, USA. https://aect.org/allevents.php

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Call for articles – The discourses of Gender, Violence and Social Inequality in the era of digital communication

CALL FOR ARTICLES
Quaderns de Filologia ? Linguistics Series vol. 26 (2021)
(https://ojs.uv.es/index.php/qfilologia/index)

Title of volume: The discourses of Gender, Violence and Social Inequality in the era of digital communication

Editors:
Sergio Maruenda Bataller (Universitat de Val?ncia)
Dolors Palau Sampio (Universitat de Val?ncia)
Maite Taboada (Simon Fraser University)

Summary:
This volume aims to study and analyse the public discourses on gender, violence and social inequality in the so-called digital media (Couldry 2012) and, more precisely, their evolution and political, cultural, social and ideological impact on these in the digital era and ?new? forms of social, institutional and political communication (Fuchs 2007; Bennet & Segerberg 2013; Winseck 2017). This volume aims to gain insights into the discourses generated and communicated through the so-called Internet society (Castells 2001), as we reach the 25th anniversary of the net. Thus, the present volume adopts a critical and communicative theoretical approach to the analysis of the current discourses that linguistically and discursively construct and constitute gender, violence and social inequality (Critical Discourse Studies, Flowerdew & Richardson 2018), as forms of cognitive and social representation that may become hegemonic or peripheral (Butler 1990; Bell 1991; Wodak 2001; Lazar 2005; Fairc
lough 2006; van Dijk 2008; Cotter 2010; Erlich, Meyerhoff & Holmes 2014).

Although not restricted to a specific methodology, this volume advocates for mixed-method approaches that combine qualitative research and corpus-based analyses for the identification of recurrent and ?normalised? discourse patterns (Corpus-Assisted Discourse Studies [CADS] – Mautner 2009; Baker et al. 2008; Partington et al. 2013; Gabrielatos & Duguid 2014; Baker & Levon 2015).

Themes:
1.      Discursive (multimodal) studies on specific topics and aspects on gender, violence and social inequality in the digital media, including press, social media, and other forms of institutional, social and political communication. Examples:
a.      The discursive representation of gender violence
b.      Women in the new forms of communication
c.      The ideological construction of diverse identities and LGTBQphobia.
d.      The discourses on migration
e.      The discourses on extremism and hate
f.      The discourses on disabilities
g.      The discourses on aporophobia
h.      etc.

2.      Historical (diachronic) and contrastive studies among cultures, languages and semiotic modes (Potts et al. 2005).
3.      Methodological proposals and models of qualitative and/or quantitative analysis of the themes of the volume.
4.      Corpus compilation and description on gender, violence and social inequality.

Abstract submission*
Proposals must be sent to:
sergio.maruenda@uv.es
Subject: abstract QF ELING 2021 Until December 15, 2020

Communication of acceptance     From January 1, 2021 to January 7, 2021

Deadline for submission of originals (full article)
Proposals must be sent to:
sergio.maruenda@uv.es
Subject: article QF ELING 2021  May 1, 2021
Peer-reviewing process  from May 1, 2021
Publication of volume   December 2021

* Abstracts must be 250-300 words, excluding references. Please provide title, author, affiliation + email, text, keywords (5), references.

Special Issue Call for Proposals Theme: Informal Learning in Online Social Communities

Special Issue Editor
Enilda Romero-Hall, Ph.D., Associate Professor of Education, IDT Graduate Coordinator,
University of Tampa, eromerohall@ut.edu

Introduction

In education and training settings, we often discuss the term informal learning to address learning experiences that do not follow a specific curriculum and are not restricted to a specific environment (Richter, Kunter, Klusmann, Lüdtke, and Baumert, 2011). Other definitions of informal learning refer to education that is never organized, has no set objectives, and is not intentionally undertaken as a learning activity (Werquin, 2007). It is very possible that learners can shift seamlessly between formal and informal learning (Moore, 2016). Additionally, Moore (2016) states that during informal learning, the learners may or may not realize that they are acquiring new information. Eraut (2004) refers to this type of informal learning as implicit learning. Eurat (2004) also distinguishes two other types of informal learning: reactive and deliberate learning. Reactive learning refers to a situation in which the individual is aware that informal learning is occurring; however, it happens spontaneously in a specific context. Deliberate learning refers to informal learning that occurs when an individual takes time to think about how and where to gather information. Today online social communities in social networking sites, listservs, messaging apps, online discussion forums, workplace networks, and others facilitate creating and sharing information. It has been argued that, through these multi-user connections and support systems, individuals engaged can, in turn, have access to content and participation in informal learning experiences (Rehm & Notten, 2016).

Potential Topics

This special issue of JAID seeks contributions from K-12, higher education, business, and workplace contexts that focus on how the instructional design of informal learning in online social communities is shaping learning experiences. Potential topics to address include but are not limited to:

  • Benefits and drawbacks of informal learning
  • Informal learning and identify formation
  • Bringing between formal and informal learning
  • Bringing between different types of informal learning
  • Lurking as a mechanism for informal learning
  • Informal learning in the workplace online social communities
  • Social justice movements and informal learning
  • Informal learning in online social communities across cultures
  • Examples of informal learning in online social communities in different settings

JAID Article Types In line with JAID standards, submitted articles must fall under one of the following three types:

Instructional Design Practice: This is an applied journal serving a practicing community. Our focus is on what practitioners are doing in authentic contexts and their observed results. These articles cover topics of broad concern to instructional design practitioners. The articles should represent issues of practical importance to working designers.

Research Studies on Applied Instructional Design: JAID is interested in publishing empirical studies exploring the application of instructional design principles in applied settings. Quantitative and qualitative studies are welcome.

Instructional Design/Performance Design Position Papers: JAID also accepts position papers that attempt to bridge theory and practice. Examples may include conceptual frameworks and new ideas facing the instructional design community. The paper must also provide enough information to allow the replication of the innovation or continuation of the research in other settings. Position papers must be based in the context of a theoretical framework. Efficacy data is strongly preferred, but not always required, contingent upon the potential generalizability or value of the innovation.

Timeline for Special Issue

November 9, 2020 Call for Proposals for the Special Issue on “Informal Learning in Online Social Communities” is open.

December 11, 2020 Outline of 500 words of the proposed manuscript due by 10 pm (EST): https://tinyurl.com/JAIDInformalLearningCFP

January 11, 2021 Invitation to submit a full manuscript sent to authors. Important: An invitation to submit a complete manuscript does not guarantee the manuscript will be published; all manuscripts must still undergo a full peer-review process.

March 26, 2021 Full manuscripts due.

Proposal Submission Information

Please upload a PDF file with your name, institution, and email address as well as a brief overview (approx. 500 words) of the proposed article using the following link: https://tinyurl.com/JAIDInformalLearningCFP for initial review. If accepted for full manuscript review, you will be contacted by the special issue editor and directed to the JAID portal for where you will submit your full manuscript per the schedule provided. We kindly ask authors to also serve as reviewers for the submissions. Thank you.

Full Manuscript Submission Information

Full manuscript submissions must be prepared according to the JAID guidelines: https://www.jaid.pub/call. The Journal of Applied Instructional Design (JAID) is a peer-reviewed journal sponsored by the Association for Educational Communications and Technology (AECT).