Learning Analytics Summer Institute 2013 (LASI-13)
Stanford University, July 1-5, 2013
twitter: #lasi13
Introduction
Learning Analytics as both a research topic and emerging marketplace has recently garnered the attention of faculty, educational researchers and administrators, policy makers, data scientists and learning technology entrepreneurs. Unprecedented quantity of, and access to, learner-generated data has opened up new opportunities, for instance, for researchers to better understand how learners learn, for educators to assess the impact of teaching activities and interventions, and for learners to receive personalized, real-time, automated support for their learning advancements.
Learning Analytics (LA) as a field is related to disciplines such as educational data mining, machine learning, various branches of psychology, learning sciences, psychometrics, and systems theory. LA aspires to integrate cognitive, social, pedagogical, technical, and organizational components to advance a holistic view of learners and the cognitive, social, organizational contributions to their learning processes. Cross-disciplinary research, publications, and specific documented socio-technical systems and their associated designs and algorithms are important for advancing these goals.
For the past three years, the Society for Learning Analytics Research has hosted open online courses, the international LAK conference and national meetups, initiated a distributed research lab for PhD students, and established the Journal of Learning Analytics. During this timeframe, researchers from learning sciences, computer supported collaborative learning, and related disciplines have found research affinity with the emerging LA field.
Leading international universities have initiated programs and enacted strategies to use LA to improve learner success and improve organizational effeciency. Numerous schools have adopted personalization and adaptive learning systems to support learners. Corporations and startups have also turned their focus to learning analytics, resulting in numerous entrants into the LA field to promote increased learner success and more efficient learning practices.
This bricolage of research, intersecting fields of study, and corporate activity has created an exciting, albeit sometimes confusing, landscape for academics, PhD students, and the diverse users of LA products and projects.
Summer Institute
A critical window of opportunity is opening as we stand on the threshold of what may be a new discipline with disruptive potential for educational research and practice. Bringing the right mix of people together for an intensive ‘summer camp’ could serve as an intellectual and social springboard to accelerate the maturation of the discipline — as was the case for other young disciplines, such as cognitive neuroscience.
The Learning Analytics Summer Institute (LASI) is a strategic five-day event, July 1-5, 2013, co-organized by SoLAR and Stanford University. The International Educational Data Mining Society is also assisting with event organization.
The objective is that participants will leave better equipped to actively engage in advancing the LA field through their teaching and research activities. Specifically, LASI has two goals:
- Build the field of Learning Analytics through cross disciplinary interactions, identification of research and teaching needs, advancement of LA methods, and connecting isolated researchers.
- Develop the skills and knowledge of doctoral students and academics, equipping them to engage actively in LA research and teaching.
Selection of participants will balance disciplines, skillsets and seniority — see the application criteria for details.
Format
The Summer Institute’s goals of (1) building the LA field and (2) developing the skills of researchers, educators and students will be achieved through a combination of lectures, hands-on tutorials, group work and ample opportunity for informal interactions. Expected activities include presentations from notable researchers, innovative startups, and experts from related fields, coupled with research discussions, workshops and a doctoral consortium track will attend to supporting PhD candidates… all designed to define the needs of the LA field, identify research gaps and needs, and establish a research agenda.
Virtual / Regional / Local LASI
This is a week with a potentially global footprint, our hope being that Stanford will be just one node in a network of events. Lectures from Stanford will be live-streamed, enabling not just remote attendance, but regional Institutes and local events running in parallel. Currently there are events planned in Europe and Latin America, with others under consideration. Combine remote viewing of Stanford sessions with your own keynotes, agenda-setting workshops, hands-on tutorials and debates — whatever meets the needs of your context, with you feeding back to the network what’s unfolding in your part of the world. We anticipate these may cover the whole range from 100% online, to 50/50 blended, to 100% f-f. They may scale from nations/regions/states, to a small group in your institution translating the big ideas into practical implications. So think glocal, and think about the mix that will work for you and your community. [learn more...]
Institute Leads
Ryan S.J.d. Baker, Columbia University, Teachers College, USA
John Behrens, Pearson Education, USA
Simon Buckingham Shum, The Open University, UK
Shane Dawson, University of South Australia, AUS
Dragan Gasevic, Athabasca University, CA
Caroline Haythornthwaite, University of British Columbia, USA
Ken Koedinger, Carnegie Mellon University, USA
Grace Lynch, Open Universities Australia, AUS
Taylor Martin, Utah State University, USA
Roy Pea, Stanford University, USA
George Siemens, Athabasca University, CA
Timeline
Applications due: 17:00 PST, January 30, 2013
Notification: March 30, 2013
Summer Institute: July 1-5, 2013
Enquiries
Enquiries about participating in, or sponsoring, LASI may be emailed to George Siemens <gsiemens atsign gmail.com> with the subject line containing: LASI Enquiry
If you are interested in connecting with the others running a regional/local event, please contact Simon Buckingham Shum <s.buckingham.shum atsign gmail.com> with the subject line containing:LASI Local
Speakers at Stanford are by invitation, with the program now being designed. Queries around theprogram should go to Dragan Gasevic <dragan.gasevic atsign gmail.com> with the subject line containing: LASI Program. Regional/local satellite events will design their own schedules and programs.
How to apply
The applications are only accepted through the EasyChair site of the summer institute. Instructions how to apply are provided at http://www.solaresearch.org/events/lasi/
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