Call for Applications: 9th Annual LearnLab Summer School

Call for Applications

9th Annual LearnLab Summer School
to be held at

Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh, PA, USA
June 24-28, 2013

 

The application deadline is April 28, 2013.

Click here to apply:  http://www.learnlab.org/opportunities/summer/application.php

Application Process Open

Monday, June 24, 2013 – Friday, June 28, 2013

  • An intensive five-day course that focuses on a wide range of advanced learning technologies for course development and scientific research. The summer school covers the design and implementation of course materials with advanced learning technologies. It also focuses on designing, running, and analysis of in vivo experiments.
  • The course is half lecture and half hands-on activities.
  • The course will provide both conceptual background knowledge on advanced technology for learning and hands-on experience with state-of-the-art development tools.
  • Applicants choose one of four parallel tracks: Intelligent Tutor Systems development (ITS), In Vivo experimentation (IV), Computer Supported Collaborative Learning (CSCL), and Educational Data Mining (EDM).
  • Application deadline: Midnight April 28, 2013. Notification of acceptance May 6, 2013.

Summer School Content

We invite applications for participation in an intensive 1-week summer school on advanced learning technologies and technology-enhanced learning experiments. The summer school will provide a conceptual background and considerable hands-on experience in developing, running and analyzing technology-enhanced learning experiments.

Tracks

The summer school is organized into four parallel tracks: Intelligent Tutor Systems development (ITS), In Vivo experimentation (IV), Computer Supported Collaborative Learning (CSCL), and Educational Data Mining (EDM). The tracks will overlap somewhat but will differ significantly with respect to the hands-on activities, which make up about half the summer school. The goal for each track is described below.

  • ITS track: in the intelligent tutor system development track, you will learn to implement a prototype computer-based tutor, using authoring tools developed by LearnLab researchers, such as CTAT (the Cognitive Tutor Authoring Tools) or TuTalk. CTAT supports the creation of intelligent tutoring systems. TuTalk is used to develop tutorial dialogue systems that interact with students in natural language.
  • EDM track: if you are in the educational data mining track, you will learn to analyze an educational data set using data mining tools and methods. The data set used in hands-on activities could be one of the data sets currently in LearnLab’s Data Shop or you could bring your own.
  • IV track: if you are in the “in vivo” track, you will learn to design in vivo experiments. In the hands-on portion, you will create a prototype of an in vivo experiment for one of the LearnLab courses.
  • CSCL Track: if you are in the Computer Supported Collaborative Learning track, you will learn to implement automatic support for collaborative learning that could be integrated with an existing environment, such as the Virtual Math Teams on-line learning environment.

The summer school involves intensive mentoring by LearnLab researchers. The mentoring starts by e-mail before the summer school, in order to select a subject domain and task for the project, where appropriate. It continues during the summer school with a good amount of one-on-one time during the hands-on sessions. The mentors are assigned based on your interests as stated in the application. All participants will have the opportunity to interact with all course instructors, but will interact more frequently with their designated mentor.

Format

The summer school will last five days. Each day will include lectures, discussion sessions, and laboratory sessions where the participants will work on developing a small prototype system or a small prototype experiment in an area of math, science, or language learning. The participants will use state-of-the-art tools including the Cognitive Tutor Authoring Tools and other tools for course development, environments for Computer Supported Collaborative Learning, natural language dialog, semi-automated coding of verbal data, and DataShop for storage of student interaction data analysis of student knowledge and performance.

On the last day, student teams will present their accomplishments to the rest of the participants, followed by a “graduation” party. Participants will be expected to do some preparation before the summer school starts.

Background Reading

For those who would like to get more information prior to submitting an application, papers available provide background about the topics, technology, and tools that will be discussed during the summer school.

Course Instructors

The primary course instructors will include:

Dr. Kenneth R. Koedinger
Human-Computer Interaction Institute
Carnegie Mellon University

Dr. Vincent Aleven
Human-Computer Interaction Institute
Carnegie Mellon University

Dr. Carolyn Penstein Rosé
Language Technologies Institute
Human-Computer Interaction Institute
Carnegie Mellon University

Dr. Geoff Gordon
Machine Learning
Carnegie Mellon University

Dr. Noboru Matsuda
Human-Computer Interaction Institute
Carnegie Mellon University

Dr. John Stamper
Human-Computer Interaction Institute
Carnegie Mellon University

Dr. Tim Nokes
Learning Research and Development Center
University of Pittsburgh

All instructors have considerable experience in research and development in technology-based learning experiments, computer-supported collaborative learning, intelligent tutoring systems and tutorial dialogue systems. Members of the team have taught summer schools for the past four years. All have taught similar material as semester-long courses.

Required Background

The course is intended for anyone with the educational zeal who would like to learn how to create technology enhanced learning experiments or with the appropriate computational background to actually build an intelligent tutoring system. This could include seasoned edutech researchers, advanced graduate students, computationally sophisticated teachers and commercial or military instructional developers. Please contact us when in doubt. In the past, people with a variety of backgrounds have attended the summer school, including psychology, education, human-computer interaction, computer science, as well as instructors in a wide range of domains.

Applications

Please visit our online application page

Important Dates

  • The deadline for applications is April 28, 2013.
  • Admission decisions will be made by May 6, 2013.

Costs

The fee for attending the summer school is $950.00. The fee for Graduate Students is $500.00; proof of current enrollment is required for this rate. A limited number of graduate students scholarships are available. See the application for information about how to request a scholarship. The fee includes a continental breakfast and lunch, but not lodging or travel. Please make checks payable to Carnegie Mellon University.

Participants will be responsible for paying for their own travel, additional meals and lodging. Dorm rooms at the Carnegie Mellon University campus are available for a low rate (typically around $80/night for a single room). Rooms may be shared further reducing this cost.

Academic credit is not available, although participants will receive a certificate verifying their participation. 30 hours of Act 48 credit is available for K12 teachers.

For More Information

Please address inquiries to Michael Bett, LearnLab Managing Director, email.

 

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ALLS Papers and Posters to be Presented at the 13th Philippine Computing Society Congress

The 13th Philippine Computing Society Congress (PCSC 2013) is going to be held at the Ateneo de Manila University on March 7-8, 2013. Included in the program are 2 papers and 5 posters from ALLS:

Papers

An Intelligent Tutoring System for Japanese Language Particles with User Assessment and Feedback
Zachary T. Chung, Hiroko Nagai and Ma. Mercedes T. Rodrigo

Developing an Android-Based Game Tool with Monitoring Support to Track Stroke Patient Progress During Rehabilitation
Christle Grace Carabeo, Charisse May Dalida and Erica Marla Padilla

Posters

Designing an Alternate Reality Game Within the Ateneo Community as Medium for Tangential Learning
Richmond Chiu and Wihl Micoh Lin

Designing and Developing an Affect-Sensitive Horror Game
Richmond Cheng and Mikaela Garcia

Developing a Real-Time Tactics Game Using an Optimized Cost-effective Eye-tracking Device
Nicko Caluya and Carlos Mapua

Developing a Kinect-Enabled Rail Shooter Game
Stephanie Go, Marlou Ramas and Daryl Saavedra

Controlling a Robotic Hand Using a Non-Invasive Brain-Computer Interface
Antonio Rafael Umali, Jian Paolo Ablir and Miguel Luis Sanchez

Congratulations to our students and their mentors!

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ALLS Team Visits Ateneo de Naga

An ALLS team composed of Christle Carabeo, Zachary Chung, Stephanie Go, and Ma. Mercedes Rodrigo visited Ateneo de Naga University on Feb 18 to present some of the work that lab produced in school year 2012-2013.  The presentations and were as follows:

Ma. Mercedes Rodrigo – Learning Math by Teaching Math: A Case Study in Intelligent Tutoring and Educational Data Mining [PDF]

Zachary Chung – Intelligent Tutoring System for Japanese Language Particles with User Assessment and Feedback [PDF]

Christle Carabeo – Developing an Android-based Game Tool with Monitoring Support to Track Stroke Patient Progress During Rehabilitation [PDF]

Stephanie Go – Developing a Kinect-Enabled Rail Shooter Game [PDF]

 

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ALLS Team Visits Ateneo de Davao

An ALLS team composed of Nicko Caluya, Erica Padilla, Marlou Ramas, and Ma. Mercedes Rodrigo visited Ateneo de Davao University on Feb 11 to present some of the work that lab produced in school year 2012-2013.  The presentations and were as follows:

* Ma. Mercedes Rodrigo – Learning Math by Teaching Math: A Case Study in Intelligent Tutoring and Educational Data Mining [PDF]
* Nicko Caluya – Developing a Real-Time Tactics Game Using an Optimized and Cost-effective Eye-Tracking Device. [PDF]
* Erica Padilla – Developing an Android-based Game Tool with Monitoring Support to Track Stroke Patient Progress During Rehabilitation [PDF]
* Marlou Ramas – Developing a Kinect-Enabled Rail Shooter Game [PDF]

 

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Carnegie Mellon Professional Masters in Learning Science and Engineering Applications Due January 31, 2013

Carnegie Mellon University invites individuals to apply for our new interdisciplinary professional masters program in Learning Science and Engineering. (See http://www.lse.cs.cmu.edu.). Please feel free to print and post the attached poster and forward this appropriately. Applications are due January 31, 2013 for the inaugural class commencing in the fall 2013.

Taught by leaders in the fields of computer science, psychology, and design, this one year masters program is designed for individuals with a background in psychology, education, computer science, design, information technology, and business. Graduates will apply evidenced based learning science research to develop and evaluate programs in formal and informal educational settings including schools, workplaces, homes, museums and involving both face-to-face and online interactions.

Students who seek the knowledge, skills, and techniques will re-examine the goals of education and assessment and design the future of educational technology. Through case studies and practice on real world problems, students will learn to engineer and implement innovative and effective educational solutions employing “in vivo” experiments and educational data mining techniques. Students will be trained in how to develop continual improvement programs that reliably identify both best practices and opportunities for change. Students will gain depth in psychometric and educational data mining methods, interaction design, cognitive and social psychology principles, design, implementation, and evaluation of educational interventions among others. Graduates of the program will be ready to assume key positions in corporations and private and public universities and schools; they will become designers, developers, and evaluators of educational technologies and learning environments as well as domain experts, learning technology policy-makers, or Chief Learning Officers.

More information about this exciting new program and the application can be found at http://www.lse.cs.cmu.edu.

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