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Call for Papers on Technology support for fostering life-long learning of learners with disabilities

Call for Papers

Special Issue on
Technology support for fostering life-long learning of learners with disabilities  in Journal of Educational Technology & Society (SSCI indexed)

Special issue publication date: January 2016

IMPORTANT DATES
Full papers due : 15 March 2015
Feedback to authors: 1 July 2015
Revised papers due: 5 September 2015
Special issue publication: January 2016

Technology support for learning and its societal impact have great potential to offer a wide range of opportunities and equality for learners with disabilities. Technology-enhanced learning environments provide opportunities for diffusion of knowledge anywhere and anytime, and hence are excellent vehicles for facilitating construction of knowledge within the frame of lifelong learning to foster transferable skills for all learners, including disabled learners.
Existing research suggests that instructional design and learning procedures need to adapt to learners’ characteristics and expectations to reach successful learning outcomes. This is particularly critical in life-long learning situations where the learning process primarily relies on the actions and motivation of the learners. Novel approaches are needed to be designed and developed to support learners with disabilities in such situations. Technology-enhanced learning environments therefore need to cater to different types of learner disabilities.
This special issue aims to offer insights into research directions related to pedagogy, technology, social impact and other related aspects of technology-enhanced learning environments in lifelong learning for learners with disabilities. Contributions are invited in, but are not limited to, the following topics:
-Technology support for learners with disabilities in social life
-Technology-enhanced learning environments for learners with disabilities
-Social networking tools as learning platform for learners with disabilities
-E-learning strategies as learning and teaching in education of learners with disabilities
-Using unobstructed information technology in education of learners with disabilities

PROCEDURE
Interested authors are invited to submit full manuscripts by 15 March 2015 using EasyChair system at:
https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=etstech4llldisabilit
The papers should be no more than 7000 words each and should be formatted as per the author guidelines available at the ETS website:
http://www.ifets.info/rev.php?pub=true
Manuscripts should be original, unpublished, and not being considered for publication elsewhere at the time of submission to Journal of Educational Technology & Society or during the review process.

Guest Editors
Dr. Kursat Cagiltay, Middle East Technical University, Ankara
Dr. Fahriye Altınay, Near East University, Nicosia
Dr. Zehra Altınay, Near East University, Nicosia
Dr. Mohamed Jemni, ALECSO, Tunis

Instructional Design and Technology, Educational Technology, Online Learning Conferences 2014

The following are selected conferences that interest me related to instructional design, educational technology and online learning. These were taken from Educational Technology and Education Conferences #31 June to December 2014 Clayton R Wright (1)

 

September 2014

October 2014

November 2014

December 2014

 

 

Cider Session Recording — Meta-analysis of the CoI Framework

The following information came from the Canadian Initiative for Distance Education Research (CIDER) website.

October 1, 2014

Meta-analysis of the CoI Framework
Madelaine Befus, Athabasca University

This presentation focuses on exploring the shape and scope of the corpus of CoI research literature. The Community of Inquiry Research Integration and Practice Alliance, comprised of Drs. M. Cleveland-Innes, D. R. Garrison, M. Koole, N. Vaughan, and doctoral student, M. Befus, and sponsored by an Athabasca University Mission Critical Research grant, recently completed phase one of an applied meta-analysis of 73 quantitative and mixed-methods empirical studies citing the Garrison et al., 2000, Arbaugh et al. (2008) and using the CoI survey tool. Preliminary results of this study confirm the CoI framework continues to resonate with post-secondary educational researchers. Separate and on-going doctoral dissertation research to explain and define the phenomena and influence of the CoI framework on education that brings further definition to this expansive and rapidly expanding body of literature will be shared.

Watch the recording here:
https://connect.athabascau.ca/p6qghaeawof/?launcher=false&fcsContent=true&pbMode=normal

CALL FOR PAPERS – SPECIAL ISSUE: DIGITAL LITERACIES IN THE US SOUTH

CALL FOR PAPERS – SPECIAL ISSUE
E-Learning and Digital Media (www.wwwords.co.uk/elea)

DIGITAL LITERACIES IN THE US SOUTH
GUEST EDITORS: Heather M. Pleasants & Ryan M. Rish

Digital literacy practices have often been celebrated as means of transcending the constraints of the physical world through the production of new social spaces, though Mills and Comber (2013) write that ‘place matters to literacy because the meanings of our language and actions are always materially and socially placed in the world’ (p. 1). In this special issue, we consider how the U.S. South offers opportunities to examine the links between space, place, justice, and the role of digital literacies in creating possibilities for our individual and collective futures (Avila & Zacher Pandya, 2013; Pleasants & Salter, 2014). We find Soja’s (2010) trialectic of the social, the spatial, and the historical to provide a helpful heuristic in examining the ways that the materiality of place is an important anchor to determining the ‘so what’ of work that involves digital media and literacies.

In this Special Issue of the journal E-Learning and Digital Media (www.wwwords.co.uk/ELEA), the editors encourage manuscripts that consider how the U.S. South is a particularly generative context for exploring how social, cultural, historical and political literacies are brought to bear on a range of places that traverse the urban, rural and suburban, with emphasis placed on the ways digital technology is used to create identities and do work within social and material worlds. This focus on the South foregrounds the ways that place matters within our understanding of ourselves and the world around us. As Robinson (2013) writes, ‘The South is forever rural, forever 1964, sometimes forever slavery, which obscures the way it both is and is not those things. To say that the South ain’t changed and is all country is not true. But then neither is saying it has changed and is new and shiny and cosmopolitan.’ In our social and spatial imaginaries (Appadurai, 1996), the South is often constructed as a monolith; yet, in actuality, notions of what the South is/isn’t, was/will be are continually contested, negotiated, reified, and renegotiated. Considering the heterogeneity of the South across intersections of differences (including, but not limited to race, class, gender, sexuality, ability and language), we argue that studies of digital literacies in the South have great potential for informing how the investigations of other regions within and outside of the U.S. context can be conducted in regard to social, spatial, and historical considerations.

This special issue encourages manuscripts that consider the following questions:
– How do particular digital literacy practices challenge or complicate monolithic or binary notions of place, identity, and issues relevant within the U.S. South?
– How are representations of the South interrogated, contested, reinforced, or reified through the digital literacy practices of youth and adults?
– In what ways do digital spaces and tools allow individuals to understand, transgress, and/or reimagine the material and historical realities of Southern physical places and/or social imaginaries?
– How do place-based struggles, tensions, and issues in the South impact teaching and learning with digital tools and spaces? How or to what extent do the affordances of technology (digital and/or multimodal means of representations of learning) support students’ abilities to speak to and interrogate their own social/cultural, spatial, and historical contexts?
– How does an awareness of context-specific norms of Southern places, mobilities, and/or boundaries help students and teachers practice critical perspectives (e.g., the ability to express and critique what is permitted and not permitted, what is possible and not possible) for the purposes of social/spatial justice and ethical action?

SUBMISSIONS
All contributions should be original and should not be under consideration elsewhere. Authors should be aware that they are writing for an international audience and should use appropriate language. Manuscripts should not exceed 8000 words. For further information and authors’ guidelines please see: www.wwwords.co.uk/elea/howtocontribute.asp

All papers will be peer-reviewed, and evaluated according to their significance, originality, content, style, clarity and relevance to the journal. Please submit your initial abstract (300- 400 words) by email to the Guest Editors.

GUEST EDITORS
Heather Pleasants, University of Alabama (heather.pleasants@ua.edu)
Ryan Rish, Kennesaw State University (rrish1@kennesaw.edu)

IMPORTANT DATES
Deadline for abstracts to guest editors: November 15, 2014
Deadline for submissions/full papers: February 15, 2015
Deadline for feedback from reviewers: March 30, 2015
Final deadline for amended papers: April 30, 2015
Publication date: June 1, 2015

References
Appadurai, A. (1996). Modernity at large: Cultural dimensions of globalization. Minneapolis, MN: University of Minnesota Press.
Avila, J. & Zacher Pandya, J. (Eds.). (2012). Critical digital literacies as social praxis: Intersections and challenges. New York, NY: Peter Lang.
Mills, K.A., & Comber, B. (2013). Space, place and power: The spatial turn in literacy research. In K. Hall, T. Cremin, B. Comber, & L. Moll (Eds.), International Handbook of Research in Children’s Literacy, Learning and Culture (pp. 1 26). London: Wiley-Blackwell Publishing, Inc.
Pleasants, H.M., & Salter, D.E. (Eds.). (2014). Community-based multiliteracies and digital media projects: Questioning assumptions and exploring realities. New York, NY: Peter Lang.
Robinson, Z.F. (2014). This ain’t Chicago: Race, class, and regional identity in the post-soul South. Chapel Hill, NC: The University of North Carolina Press.
Soja, E.W. (2010). Seeking spatial justice. Minneapolis, MN: University of Minnesota Press.