RE: [Air-l] Overwhelming Response!
In creating the panel you will be composing a narrative to submit for the conference. These will be reviewed by AoIR reviewers. So, the issue is to make your submission make sense. If you have lots of people, you will need to show that the many submissions make a whole, and one that conference attendees will want to listen to. You will have to make the case for the non-traditional format. You will need to let reviewers know how each person will contribute to the session (e.g. very short talks, or quick idea presentations), and how you will manage the time and contributions. You have to show how each speaker fits with the overall theme of your panel. Basically, you have to sell this to the reviewers as legitimate, worthwhile, and manageable. Make the case. /Caroline Program Chair IR 6.0
===== Original Message From Ted M Coopman <coopman@u.washington.edu> ===== Wow, I have posted more on this in the last two days than in the last two years!
My request for panel participants has resulted in an overwhelming response. The topics and backgrounds of those who have emailed me are as varied as they are interesting.
However, this creates a problem since 14 people seems a tad on the high side for a panel!
Therefore, I have a question. Is it possible/practical to have a mega-panel or should we break in up into two panels (part 1 and part 2)? I have seen this done at other conferences but didn't know how it was engineered (either by the PP or the submitters). I didn't want one panel to get rejected just because another one on the same topic is seen as redundant.
Obviously, there would be no overlap on participants. I really want to facilitate folks being able to attend. So, I'm at a loss for what to do.
Any suggestions on handling this excess of enthusiasm would be appreciated.
-TED
Ted M. Coopman Department of Communication University of Washington
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--------- Caroline Haythornthwaite Associate Professor Graduate School of Library and Information Science University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Okay, this is great feedback and against my better judgment I will go for it! I did have a question about the online form. Am I correct to assume that when submitting a panel that the "primary author," the "abstract," and the "program insert" fields would first be for the panel organizer, the general panel abstract, and program insert? So would one use the "add another author" function for each panel participant? I don't see a way to put each participants individual abstracts in (just a field for a bio). Since I will be doing a lot of data entry, a little help ahead of time would be great. Thanks, -TED Ted M. Coopman Department of Communication University of Washington On Sat, 12 Feb 2005, haythorn wrote:
In creating the panel you will be composing a narrative to submit for the conference. These will be reviewed by AoIR reviewers. So, the issue is to make your submission make sense.
If you have lots of people, you will need to show that the many submissions make a whole, and one that conference attendees will want to listen to. You will have to make the case for the non-traditional format. You will need to let reviewers know how each person will contribute to the session (e.g. very short talks, or quick idea presentations), and how you will manage the time and contributions. You have to show how each speaker fits with the overall theme of your panel.
Basically, you have to sell this to the reviewers as legitimate, worthwhile, and manageable. Make the case.
/Caroline Program Chair IR 6.0
===== Original Message From Ted M Coopman <coopman@u.washington.edu> ===== Wow, I have posted more on this in the last two days than in the last two years!
My request for panel participants has resulted in an overwhelming response. The topics and backgrounds of those who have emailed me are as varied as they are interesting.
However, this creates a problem since 14 people seems a tad on the high side for a panel!
Therefore, I have a question. Is it possible/practical to have a mega-panel or should we break in up into two panels (part 1 and part 2)? I have seen this done at other conferences but didn't know how it was engineered (either by the PP or the submitters). I didn't want one panel to get rejected just because another one on the same topic is seen as redundant.
Obviously, there would be no overlap on participants. I really want to facilitate folks being able to attend. So, I'm at a loss for what to do.
Any suggestions on handling this excess of enthusiasm would be appreciated.
-TED
Ted M. Coopman Department of Communication University of Washington
_______________________________________________ The Air-l-aoir.org@listserv.aoir.org mailing list is provided by the Association of Internet Researchers http://aoir.org Subscribe, change options or unsubscribe at: http://listserv.aoir.org/listinfo.cgi/air-l-aoir.org
Join the Association of Internet Researchers: http://aoir.org/airjoin.html
--------- Caroline Haythornthwaite Associate Professor Graduate School of Library and Information Science University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
participants (2)
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haythorn -
Ted M Coopman