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    EDM 2010 - The Third International Conference on Educational Data MiningEDM2010

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    Website http://www.educationaldatamining.org/EDM2010 | Want to Edit it Edit Freely

    Category EDM 2010

    Deadline: March 10, 2010 | Date: June 11, 2010

    Venue/Country: Pittsburgh, U.S.A

    Updated: 2010-06-04 19:32:22 (GMT+9)

    Call For Papers - CFP

    The Third International Conference on Educational Data Mining

    Pittsburgh, PA USA

    June 11-13, 2010

    Call for Papers

    The Third International Conference on Educational Data Mining brings together

    researchers from computer science, education, psychology, psychometrics, and

    statistics to analyze large data sets to answer educational research

    questions. The increase in instrumented educational software, as well as state

    databases of student test scores, has created large repositories of data

    reflecting how students learn. The EDM conference focuses on computational

    approaches for using those data to address important educational questions.

    The broad collection of research disciplines ensures cross fertilization of

    ideas, with the central questions of educational research serving as a

    unifying focus. This Conference emerges from preceding EDM workshops at the

    AAAI, AIED, ICALT, ITS, and UM conferences.

    Topics of Interest

    We welcome papers describing original work. Areas of interest include but are

    not limited to:

    * Improving educational software. Many large educational data sets are

    generated by computer software. Can we use our discoveries to improve the

    softwareâ?™s effectiveness?

    * Domain representation. How do learners represent the domain? Does this

    representation shift as a result of instruction? Do different subpopulations

    represent the domain differently?

    * Evaluating teaching interventions. Student learning data provides a

    powerful mechanism for determining which teaching actions are successful. How

    can we best use such data?

    * Emotion, affect, and choice. The studentâ?™s level of

    interest and willingness to be a partner in the educational process is

    critical. Can we

    detect when students are bored and uninterested? What other affective states

    or student choices should we track?

    * Integrating data mining and pedagogical theory. Data mining typically

    involves searching a large space of models. Can we use existing educational

    and psychological knowledge to better focus our search?

    * Improving teacher support. What types of assessment information would

    help teachers? What types of instructional suggestions are both feasible to

    generate and would be welcomed by teachers?

    * Replication studies. We are especially interested in papers that apply a

    previously used technique to a new domain, or that reanalyze an existing data

    set with a new technique.

    * Best practices for adaptation of data mining techniques to EDM. We are

    especially interested in papers that present best practices or methods for the

    adaptation of techniques from data mining and other relevant literatures to

    the specific needs of analysis of educational data.

    Important Dates

    * Paper submission: March 10, 2010 (23:59:59 EST), no extension

    * Acceptance notification: April 21, 2010

    * Poster abstract submission: April 28, 2010 (23:59:59 EST)

    * Poster notification: May 3, 2010

    * Camera ready papers, posters: May 19, 2010

    * Conference: June 11-13, 2010

    Submission Types

    All submissions should follow the formatting guidelines (MS Word, PDF). There

    are three types of submission:

    * Full papers: Maximum of 10 pages. Should describe substantial,

    unpublished work

    * Young researchers: Maximum of 8 pages. Designed for graduate students

    and undergraduates

    * Poster abstracts: Maximum of 2 pages

    Conference Organization

    * Conference Chair: Ryan S.J.d. Baker, Worcester Polytechnic Institute

    * Program Chairs: Agathe Merceron, Beuth University of Applied

    Sciences Berlin

    Philip I. Pavilk Jr., Carnegie Mellon University

    * Local Organizing Chair: John Stamper, Carnegie Mellon University

    * Web Chair: Arnon Hershkovitz, Tel Aviv University

    Program Committee

    Esma Aimeur, University of Montreal, Canada

    Beth Ayers, Carnegie Mellon University, USA

    Ryan Baker, Worcester Polytechnic Institute, USA

    Tiffany Barnes, University of North Carolina at Charlotte, USA

    Joseph Beck, Worcester Polytechnic Institute, USA

    Bettina Berendt, Katholieke Universiteit Leuven , Belgium

    Gautam Biswas, Vanderbilt University, USA

    Cristophe Choquet, Université du Maine, France

    Cristina Conati, University of British Columbia, Canada

    Richard Cox, University of Sussex, UK

    Michel Desmarais, Ecole Polytechnique de Montreal, Canada

    Aude Dufresne, University of Montreal, Canada

    Mingyu Feng, Worcester Polytechnic Institute, USA

    Art Graesser, Universisty of Memphis, USA

    Andreas Harrer, Katholische Universität Eichstätt-Ingolstadt, Germany

    Neil Heffernan, Worcester Polytechnic Institute, USA

    Arnon Hershkovitz, Tel Aviv University, Israel

    Cecily Hiener, University of Utah, USA

    Roland Hubscher, Bentley University, USA

    Sebastian Iksal, Université du Maine, France

    Kenneth Koedinger, Carnegie Mellon University, USA

    Vanda Luengo, Université Joseph Fourier Grenoble, France

    Tara Madhyastha, University of Washington, USA

    Brent Martin, Canterbury University, New Zealand

    Noboru Matsuda, Carnegie Mellon University, USA

    Manolis Mavrikis, The University of Edinburgh, UK

    Gordon McCalla, Univerisity of Saskatchewan, Canada

    Bruce McLaren, Deutsches Forschungszentrum fÃ?r KÃ?nstliche Intelligenz, Germany

    Julia Mingullon Alfonso, Universitat Oberta de Catalunya, Spain

    Tanja Mitrovic, Canterbury University, New Zealand

    Jack Mostow, Carnegie Mellon University, USA

    Rafi Nachmias, Tel Aviv University, Israel

    Roger Nkambou, Université du Québec � Montréal (UQAM), Canada

    Mykola Pechenizkiy, Eindhoven University of Technology, Netherlands

    Steve Ritter, Carnegie Learning, USA

    Cristobal Romero, Cordoba University, Spain

    Carolyn Rose, Carnegie Mellon University, USA

    Steven Tanimoto, University of Washington, USA

    Sebastian Ventura, Cordoba University, Spain

    Kalina Yacef, University of Sydney, Australia

    Osmar Zaiane, University of Alberta, Canada


    Keywords: Accepted papers list. Acceptance Rate. EI Compendex. Engineering Index. ISTP index. ISI index. Impact Factor.
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