[Corpora-List] 2nd CFP: NAACL-HLT Workshop on the Innovative Use of NLP for Building Educational Applications (BEA-5)

Joel Tetreault tetreaul at CS.ROCHESTER.EDU
Tue Jan 19 17:24:20 UTC 2010


(apologies in advance for cross-posting)


 			 SECOND CALL FOR PAPERS

 			    NAACL-HLT 2010

      The 5th Workshop on the Innovative Use of NLP for Building
 		       Educational Applications

 		Los Angeles, California, USA; June 05 or 06, 2010

 	http://www.cs.rochester.edu/~tetreaul/naacl-bea5.html

 		 Submission Deadline: March 01, 2010




WORKSHOP DESCRIPTION

NLP-based applications in educational environments continue to develop at a 
fast pace. Initial work began as early as the 1960s on evaluating open-ended 
assessments, text-based intelligent tutoring systems (ITS), and proofreading 
tools. These fields continue to progress using innovative NLP techniques - 
statistical, rule-based, or some combination of the two. More recently, new 
technologies have made it possible to include speech in both assessment and 
ITS. From a somewhat different angle, NLP techniques are also being used to 
generate assessments and tools for curriculum development as well as tools to 
support assessment development. As a community we are improving existing 
capabilities, and identifying and generating innovative ways to use NLP in 
applications for writing, reading, speaking, critical thinking, and assessment 
development.

The need for, and the rapid development of, language-based capabilities have 
been driven by increased requirements for state and national assessments, and 
a growing population of foreign and second language learners. In the past ten 
years, steady growth in the area of NLP-based applications for education has 
prompted an increased number of workshops which typically focus on one 
specific aspect of NLP-based educational applications. In this workshop, we 
solicit papers from all subfields.

The workshops on the Innovative Use of NLP in Building Educational 
Applications have continued to bring together all these subfields to foster 
interaction and collaboration among researchers in both academic institutions 
and industry. Last year's workshop (NAACL/HLT 2009) was a banner year with a 
record number of submissions and attendees.  The 2010 workshop (consistent 
with previous workshops at ACL 1997, NAACL/HLT 2003, ACL 2005, ACL 2008, and 
NAACL/HLT 2009) will continue to expose the NLP research community to these 
technologies with the hope that they will continue to identify novel 
opportunities for the use of NLP techniques and tools in educational 
applications.

The workshop will include a demo session for accepted papers that involve a 
system.

Full paper and short paper topics will include, but will not be limited to, 
the following:

1) Automated scoring/evaluation for oral and written student responses
       * Content analysis for scoring/assessment
       * Grammatical error detection and correction
       * Discourse and stylistic analysis
       * Plagiarism detection
       * Machine translation for assessment, instruction and curriculum
         development


2) Intelligent Tutoring (IT) that incorporate state-of-the-art NLP methods
       * Dialogue systems in education
       * Hypothesis formation and testing
       * Multi-modal communication between students and computers
       * Generation of tutorial responses
       * Knowledge representation in learning systems
       * Concept visualization in learning systems

3) Learner cognition
       * Assessment of learner language and cognitive skill levels
       * Systems that detect and adapt to learners' cognitive or emotional
 	states
       * Tools for learners with special needs

4) Use of corpora in educational tools
       * Data mining of learner and other corpora for tool building
       * Annotation standards and schemas / annotator agreement

5) Tools for classroom teachers and/or test developers
       * NLP tools for second and foreign language learners
       * Semantic-based access to instructional materials to identify
         appropriate texts
       * Tools that automatically generate test questions such as
 	multiple choice or short answer
       * Processing of and access to lecture materials across topics and
 	genres
       * Adaptation of instructional text to individual learners' grade
 	levels
       * E-learning tools for personalized course content
       * Language-based educational games

6) Issues concerning the evaluation of NLP-based educational tools


7) Descriptions of implemented systems


SUBMISSION INFORMATION

Authors are invited to submit a full paper of up to 8 pages in electronic, PDF 
format (with up to 1 additional page for references). This year, we also 
invite short papers of up to 4 pages (including references).  Papers which 
describe systems are also invited to give a demo of their system. If you would 
like to present a demo in addition to presenting the paper, please make sure 
to select either "full paper + demo" or "short paper + demo" in the START 
submission process.

Previously published papers cannot be accepted. The submissions will be
reviewed by the program committee. As reviewing will be blind, please ensure 
that papers are anonymous.  Self-references that reveal the author's identity, 
e.g., "We previously showed (Smith, 1991) ...", should be avoided. Instead, 
use citations such as "Smith previously showed (Smith, 1991) ...".

Please use the 2010 NAACL-HLT style sheet for composing your paper:
http://naaclhlt2010.isi.edu/authors.html

And use the following START conference page to submit your paper:
https://www.softconf.com/naaclhlt2010/education/



IMPORTANT DATES

Submission deadline: March 01, 2010
Notification of acceptance: March 30, 2010
Camera-ready papers due: to be determined
Workshop: June 05 or 06, 2010



WORKSHOP CHAIRS

Joel Tetreault, ETS, USA (principal contact: JTetreault at ets.org)
Jill Burstein, ETS, USA
Claudia Leacock, Butler Hill Group, USA



PROGRAM COMMITTEE

Delphine Bernhard, LIMSI-CNRS, France
Jared Bernstein, Pearson, USA
Martin Chodorow, Hunter College, CUNY, USA
Barbara Di Eugenio, University of Illinois at Chicago, USA
Markus Dickinson, Indiana University, USA
Bill Dolan, Microsoft, USA
Maxine Eskenazi, Carnegie Mellon University, USA
Peter Foltz, Pearson, USA
Jennifer Foster, Dublin City University, Ireland
Annette Frank, University of Heidelberg, Germany
Michael Gamon, Microsoft, USA
Caroline Gasperin, University of Sao Paolo, Brazil
Iryna Gurevych, University of Darmstadt, Germany
Na-Rae Han, University of Pittsburgh, USA
Trude Heift, Simon Frasier University, Canada
Derrick Higgins, ETS, USA
Emi Izumi, NICT, Japan
Pamela Jordan, University of Pittsburgh, USA
Ola Knutsson, KTH Nada, Sweden
John Lee, City University of Hong Kong, China
Diane Litman, University of Pittsburgh, USA
Detmar Meurers, University of Tubingen, Germany
Lisa Michaud, Saint Anselm College, USA
Ani Nenkova, University of Pennsylvania, USA
Mari Ostendorf, University of Washington, USA
Ted Pedersen, University of Minnesota, USA
Dan Roth, UIUC, USA
Mathias Schulze, University of Waterloo, Canada
Stephanie Seneff, MIT, USA
Richard Sproat, Oregon Graduate Institute, USA
Jana Sukkarieh, ETS, USA
Svetlana Stenchikova, Open University, UK
Nai-Lung Tsao, National Central University, Taiwan
Pete Whitelock, Oxford University Press, UK
David Wible, National Central University, Taiwan
Magdalena Wolska, Saarbruken University, Germany

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