|  | International Workshop on 
      
       
		Efficacy of E-Learning Systems (EES 2005)
 
 May 24-25, 2005 - Miami, USA
 
 First Announcement and Call for Papers
   
      
      In conjunction with the Seventh International Conference on Enterprise Information Systems - ICEIS 2005 
      
      (http://www.iceis.org/) 
 
 
 Co-Chairs:
 
 Balbir S. Barn (balbir.barn@tvu.ac.uk)
 Dept of Computing
 Thames Valley University
 Wellington St
 Slough
 United Kingdom
 SL1 1YG
 
 Liz Sokolowski (liz.sokolowski@tvu.ac.uk)
 Dept of Computing
 Thames Valley University
 Wellington St
 Slough
 United Kingdom
 SL1 1YG
 
 
 Workshop Background and Goals
 
 This workshop sets out to assess the current status in the deployment and 
		application of E-Learning systems in higher education. There is a 
		particular focus on international perspectives of the use of E-Learning 
		systems.
 
      Higher education in the UK, Europe and United States 
		has seen the widespread deployment of E-Learning systems. In the UK, 
		recent evidence indicates dramatic uptake in the use of E-Learning 
		environments has been most rapid in the last four years. 
 Deployment can however, be further separated from the effective and 
		efficient use of such systems. There is a belief that these systems 
		while they are available for use by all stakeholders are not being used 
		as effectively as originally envisaged.
 
 Researchers have proposed several reasons.
 * Reluctance of academics to move to new technology;
 * Inadequate change management processes to support the deployment of 
		E-Learning platforms;
 * Insufficient resources to support the deployment
 
 Further exploration suggests the following non-exhaustive reasons:
 * E-Learning systems do not offer content customized for sophisticated 
		learner characteristics and specific learner styles.
 * Developing learning content is expensive and there is an urgent 
		business imperative to reuse learning content.
 * The tools to support specification and reuse of learning content are 
		still under development [Farrell et al 2004].
 * Usability of E-Learning systems.
 * Lack of pedagogical innovation in the use of such tools.
 
 Despite this, product vendors and the academic research literature 
		suggests that E-Learning systems are being used extensively at an 
		international level.
 
 Two categories of submissions/presentations will be considered:
 a) regular papers and b) tool demonstrations.
 
 Regular papers can be theoretical, experience based or present a 
		critical analysis of a case study.
 
 All submissions are required follow the procedure explained below under 
		the
 heading "Submission of Papers".
 
 
 Topics of interest
 
 - Empirical studies of the use of MLEs
 - E-Learning Systems and Information Systems Development
 - Impact on the design of curricula
 - Designing courses for E-Learning
 - Barriers for E-Learning Systems adoption
 - Strategic IT issues
 - The changing role of the Higher Education Practitioner
 - Change Management and E-Learning Systems
 - Knowledge Management and it’s role in the use of E-Learning systems
 - Requirements for E-Learning Systems
 - Technological Issues for E-Learning Systems
 - Usability and Internationalization
 - Software tools to enhance E-Learning Systems.
 - Meta data and Ontology standards for E-Learning
 - Industry Universities
 - Learning Objects
 - Accessibility of E-Learning Systems
 
 Format of the Workshop
 
 The workshop will consist of oral presentations of papers submitted in 
		advance, which will be peer-reviewed. The proceedings of the workshop 
		will be published in the form of a book by ICEIS.
 
      
      Submission of Papers 
 Prospective authors are invited to submit papers for 
		oral presentation in any of the areas listed above. Only full papers in 
		English will be accepted. The length of the paper should not exceed 8 
		pages. Instructions for preparing the manuscript (in Word and Latex 
		format) are available at the
		ICEIS web site. 
		PDF versions of the manuscript should be submitted electronically
		
		by using the facilities provided by ICEIS. In addition, to avoid 
		lost papers, an email should be sent to both workshop chairs including: 
		category of paper, title, authors' affiliation, and an abstract of the 
		paper submitted.
 
 Important Dates
 
 Full paper submission: February 15, 2005
 Author notification: March 8, 2005
 Camera-ready paper submission: March 18, 2005
 
 
 Workshop Program Committee:
 
 Prof. Balbir S. Barn, Thames Valley University, UK
 Andrew Tinson, Luton University, UK
 Ann Osler, Reading College of Art and Design
 Liz Sokolowski, Thames Valley University
 John Gordon, The ThinkExchange
 Prof. Henryk Rybinski, Warsaw University of Technology
 Prof. Mietek Muraszkiewicz, Warsaw University of Technology
 Prof. Prof Nian-Shing Chen, Griffith University
 
 
 Venue
 
 The workshop will be held at 
  Deauville Beach Resort in  
  
  Miami,  
  USA.
 
 Registration Information
 
 To attend the workshop you need to register at 
      
       http://www.iceis.org
 
 Secretariat
 
 ICEIS 2005 Secretariat - International Workshop on Efficacy of E-Learning 
		Systems (EES 2005)
 E-mail:
      workshops@iceis.org
 Web site:
       http://www.iceis.org
 
      Page Updated on 
      04-03-2005
 
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