via Michael Spector:
EDUCATIONAL TECHNOLOGY WORLD CONFERENCE (ETWC)
Bali, Indonesia, 31 July – 3 August 2016
Grand Inna Beach Hotel in Sanur, Bali
CALL FOR PAPERS
CONFERENCE FOCUS
This conference addresses a broad range of critical important themes in the fields of
educational technology in order to improve the quality and access of education for
prosperous society. The educational technology study was first developed in the United
States and has inspired scholars in many countries throughout the world, including
Indonesia. Universitas Negeri Jakarta (UNJ) was the pioneer in educational technology as
it was the first institution that established educational technology study program in tertiary
education in Indonesia. Considering the fast development of educational technology
studies and practices in Indonesia, it is important to bring a worldwide conference on
educational technology to Indonesia with the support from the Association of Educational
and Communication Technology (AECT).
Universitas Negeri Jakarta (http://www.unj.ac.id/) in collaboration with Universitas
Terbuka (http://www.ut.ac.id/), Universitas Pendidikan Ganesha
(http://undiksha.ac.id/en/), Universitas Mahendradatta
(http://universitasmahendradatta.com/) and the Association for Educational
Communications and Technology (AECT; www.aect.org) are hosting the Educational
Technology World Conference in Bali, Indonesia on July 31 – 3 August, 2016. This is a
major international conference with distinguished keynote and invited speakers from
around the world.
The theme of this conference is “Educational Technology to Improve Quality and Access
of Education for Prosperous Society.” Keynote speakers include Muhamad Nasir
(Indonesia’s Minister of Research, Technology and Higher Education), Rudiatara
(Indonesia’s Minister of Communication and Informatics, Mike Spector (Professor
Learning Technologies at the University of North Texas; Educational Technology
Research & Development editor), Barbara Lockee (Professor of Instructional Design
Strategies for Open Learning and Instruction at Virginia Tech), and Tian Belawati
(Rector of Universitas Terbuka, Indonesia).
There are 9 subthemes each led by a distinguished scholar. They are as follows (subtheme
leaders have not yet been confirmed):
1. Innovation and Creativity – studies, practices, and ideas on innovation and
creativity and the relationships to policies, needs, practices, and the diffusion of
innovation. This also covers studies, practices and ideas pertaining to game-based
learning and gamification to support learning in a variety of formal and informal
learning situations (Alessandro de Gloria; University of Genoa/Marc Childress; Baker
University)
2. Policy and Cultural Considerations – studies, practices and ideas on how education
policies along with demographic, geographic, economic and cultural factors influence
education technology (Youqun Ren; East China Normal University)
3. Networking and Collaboration – studies, practices, and ideas which involve the
collaboration of various parties (including different institutions and countries) in
order to continually share knowledge on learning (Demetrios Sampson; University of
Piraeus)
4. Open Educational Resources – the development and empowerment of open
education resources related digital online libraries and the recognition and protection
of copyright through the creative commons and open source licensing (Rory
McGreal; Athabasca University)
5. MOOCs and Badges– concepts and issues related to the role of MOOCs and
competency-based badges in supporting learning , increasing accessibility, and
improving the quality of instruction (Mike Sharples; Open University of the UK)
6. Quality Assurance, Certification and Accreditation – studies, practices, and ideas
related to license, certification, accreditation, standards, and procedures in education,
including the implementation of a vision along with strategies and programs within an
institution in order to assure quality assurance, certification, and accreditation (Allan
Yuen; University of Hong Kong)
7. Information, Technology and Communication Integration – studies, practices,
and ideas on the integration of information, technology and communication in
learning process, especially in the planning, practices and evaluation, including the
use of integrated information, technology, and communication in creating knowledge.
(Dong Sik Kim; Hanyang University)
8. Design and Development – studies, practices, ideas on designs and the development
of learning as a solution to education quality and accessibility which can be applied in
education in order to build nations’ prosperity. This also covers studies, practices and
ideas pertaining to instructional principles, learning strategies, media selection and
evaluation; studies, practices and ideas pertaining to collaboration and group learning
strategies in support of a wide variety of learning tasks in diverse situations (Miguel
Nussbaum; Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile/Jan Elen; Katholik University of
Leuven; Instructional Science editor/ Dave Merrill; Utah State University, retired).
9. Distance Education – studies, practices and ideas related to distance education,
including needs analysis, program development, registration systems, material
development, tutorials and testing affect quality and accessibility. This also covers
studies, practices and ideas pertaining to mobile learning applications to support both
formal and informal learning in a variety of situations (Trey Martindale; University of
Memphis/ Som Naidu; Swinburne University; Distance Education editor)
PAPER SUBMISSION
To submit a paper, please visit ETWC 2016 website (seminars.unj.ac.id/etwc/). Only
papers submitted through the electronic system and strictly adhering to the relevant form
publication are accepted. The submission falls into the following 2 categories: research
papers and conceptual papers.
Research Papers or conceptual papers (however, the most preferable papers are researchbased
papers) should address the following: problems, objectives/purposes, perspective (s)
or theoretical framework, significance of the study, techniques or modes of inquiry, data
sources/evidence, results and conclusions. The submitted paper must be consistent to the
following guidelines:
Full papers must be submitted to the conference secretariat (etwc2016@unj.ac.id) no
later than February 15, 2015. Papers should be in English, double-spaced in TMR 12
font, and formatted according to APA 6 guidelines (see
https://owl.english.purdue.edu/owl/resource/560/01/). Papers should be submitted as a
DOC, DOCX, or RTF file. Types of submissions and sessions are:
Full Papers 2,500 – 6,000 words including references (20 minute presentation)
Short Papers 1,500 – 2,500 words including references (15 minute presentation)
Poster Presentations – no more than six Powerpoint slides. Posters should be submitted as
a PDF file and will be presented not in the form of paper presentation.
IMPORTANT DATE
Deadline for abstract submission
(paper and poster presentations) 15 November 2015
Notification of abstract acceptance
(paper and poster presentations) 15 December 2015
Deadline for full paper submission* 15 February 2016
Deadline for early bird registration 1 April 2016
Deadline for online registration 15 June 2016
Full papers received after 15 February 2016 will NOT be published in the Conference
Proceedings. A participant who fails to meet the deadline will NOT be scheduled for
presentation.
REGISTRATION
International Participants : USD 450
AECT members : USD 350
Local participants (students/IPTPI members/teachers/lecturers) : USD 250
Deadline for Early-bird Registration is 1 April 2016. Participants who register before 1
April 2016 will be registered as AECT (Association for Educational and Communication
Technology) and IPTPI (Ikatan Profesi Teknologi Pendidikan Indonesia – Association of
Indonesian Educational Technology Professionals) members for one year free.
Registration is conducted through an online system located at seminars.unj.ac.id/etwc/.
PROCEEDINGS AND PUBLICATION
All papers of ETWC presenters will be published in the conference proceedings. The
review board and AECT will select qualified papers. These papers will be further reviewed
prior to their publication on the international journal or on a book published by an
international publisher in the U.S.A. This process will be conducted in a cooperation with
AECT.
CONFERENCE POLICY
By submitting a paper to ETWC, all authors agree to abide by all ETWC paper submission,
publication and presentation policies. Author(s) confirm that her/his work is original, has
not appear in any form of literature, and will not be submitted to any other venue
concurrently with ETWC submission or until it appears in ETWC proceedings.
Furthermore, upon paper acceptance, authors agree to transfer copyright on the accepted
paper to ETWC, and one of the authors will register the paper and present the paper at the
event.
Paper withdrawal cannot be accepted after conference pre-registration data or within three
months of the actual event – whichever date comes first. The request for paper withdrawal
can be only accepted in writing through email, letter or fax to ETWC organizer.
ETWC organizer has no responsibility for any intentional or accidental misuse,
misinterpretation, or failure to follow the above rules and conditions, and holds no legal,
civil or other responsibility for opinions, content or utilization of any method/algorithm
expressed in conference proceedings.
GUIDELINES FOR AUTHORS
There are 2 kinds of papers: research paper and conceptual paper. All manuscripts must
be written in ENGLISH. The length of manuscript for researh and conceptual papers is 20
pages. This also includes: diagrams, tables, pictures, formulas, and references. All
manuscripts must be prepared with great care to eliminate grammatical errors, misspellings
and font problems. Manuscripts should be submitted in MS Office Word 2007(.docx)
format. The accepted font type is Times New Roman size 12 and double space, tables in
font size 10. All diagrams, pictures and graphics must be embedded in the document. APA
6th Edition format for references is required for all manuscripts. The conference organizer
reserves the right to reject any manuscript that does not comply with the general format.
The Abstract Review Committee also reserves the right to reject abstract that does not
comply with the themes of the conference. All manuscripts must be sent via e-mail to the
Secretariat of ETWC 2016 at etwc2016@unj.ac.id.
Format for Manuscripts
The title of the manuscript should be bold and centered and less than 12 words (font 12).
The name of the author(s) with superscript number to refer to each author’s affiliation and
emails (leave a line after name of authors) must be placed under the title of the manuscript.
All abstracts must clearly indicate the purpose of the research, method, and important
findings of the research results. Abstract should not exceed 250 words. At least 3 keywords
must be shown after the abstract.
Below is the example of the required format
1. Written by two authors
Title of Manuscript (font 12, Bold, Centered)
Roslee Talip1, and Dg. Norizah Ag. Kiflee2
1,2School of Education & Social Development, Universiti Malaysia Sabah
rtailp@ ums.edu.my
norizahkiflee@ ums.edu.my
2. Written by one author
Title of Manuscript (font 11, Bold, Centered)
Muchlas Suseno1
1Program Studi Pendidikan Dasar Program Pascasarjana Universitas Negeri Jakarta
muchlas-suseno@unj.ac.id
Abstract (font 11, Centered and Bold)
All abstract must clearly indicate the purpose of the research and important
findings of the research. Abstract should not exceed 250 words. At least 3
keywords must be shown after the abstract. Abstract must be indented…
Keyword: Keyword1, Keyword2, Keyword3 (at least 3 keywords provided)
Main Body of the Text
The main body of the text should be divided into sections. Each section should be prefaced
by an appropriate heading. Heading 1 must be written in Bold and in Uppercase. Heading
2 must be written in italic and bold. Heading 3 must be written in italic. Please left-justify
all headings. The required sections are: INTRODUCTION (Background of Study, Literature
Review, Objectives), METHOD (Sampling Used, Procedure Collecting Data, Data Analysis),
RESULTS AND DISCUSSIONS, AND CONCLUSION. The first line of all paragraphs must be
indented by 1 inch (standard tab). Do not provide any space between paragraphs until you go
to the next section. Tables and figures should be numbered serially throughout the paper with
Arabic numerals, and each should be placed in the text where reference is made. All tables, table
headings, and table footnotes should be centered. Use 10-point Times New Roman for table
descriptions (on top of Table) and figure description (on bottom of Figure). Leave one single line
spacing before and after each table or figure. No footnote is allowed on all pages.
Below is the example of the required format
INTRODUCTION
After the first heading, there must not be any line spacing. This must be consistent for all
others Level 1 Heading. After each paragraph ends, the next paragraph should be continued without
any line spacing too.
This is an example of content after the first paragraph. Please remember that you must not
leave any line spacing. However, you need to provide 1 single line spacing when you go the next
Level 1 Heading (for example next one is Literature Review).
Concepts of E-Learning (Example of Level 2 Heading)
This is an example of literature review on the concepts of e-learning as practiced by most
researchers……
Table 1: Title
Figure 1: Title
Level 3 Heading (Example of Level 3 Heading)
This is another example on the use of Level 3 Heading which must be italic to
differentiate between the headings for level 1 and 2…….
METHOD
Please remember that after a Heading you must not leave a line. This must be consistent
throughout the manuscript…..
RESULTS AND DISCUSSIONS
CONCLUSION
Acknowledgments (if any)
Acknowledgments, if any, should be placed at the end of the text before the references. Skip a line
after the main body of the text.
References
References mentioned in the text should be numbered serially throughout the paper with Arabic
numerals following the APA 6th Edition.
Below is the example of the required format for references.
REFERENCES
Blyth, C. S., & Davis, J. N. (2007). Using formative evaluation in the development of learnercentered
materials. CALICO Journal, 25-39. Retrieved from https://www.calico.org/a-
669.html
Craik, F. I. M., & Lockhart, R. S. (1972). Levels of processing: A framework for memory
research. Journal of Verbal Learning and Verbal Behavior, 11(2), 671-684.
APPENDICES (if any)
The criteria evaluating the submitted abstract/article:
1. Is the abstract written in proper and sound English?
[ ] Yes [ ] No
If No, the abstract/article has to be rewritten?
2. Does the author adhere to the format according to the author guidelines? (e.g. Title,
Authors Names with Institutional Address and Email).
[ ] Yes [ ] No
3. Are there the problem(s) on abstract/article?
[ ] Yes [ ] No
If Yes, identified the problems to be revised by the author
…………………………………………………
4. Overall evaluation abstract/article: [ ] Accepted [ ] Revised [ ] Rejected