The following document was
compiled by Donna Byron and copied from her student session archive
. It provides a very useful set of suggestions for organizing
student research workshops.
Checklist for Planning and Running a student Session
The outline below contains a checklist for activities occuring in each
phase. You should probably check with your Exec and find out which items
they want to have final approval over (it may be different than what is
listed here). In general, you can do things as far ahead as you want, unless
the chart indicates that you have to wait for something. Issues and decision
points relating to some phases are on their own webpages (links are in
the chart).
Jump to:
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Getting Started:Things to do as soon as you're selected
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Writing and Distributing the Call For Papers
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Receiving and Reviewing papers
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Accepting Papers
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Miscellaneous stuff to work on after the accepted papers
are chosen
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Recruiting/Assigning Panelists (if you use that format)
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Printing and binding final papers
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Pre-conference preparation
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Running the session
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Post-conference Fallout: Do ASAP after the event
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Getting Started:Things to do as soon as you're selected
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Start a list (and keep it uptodate) of things you did and when, as well
as any comments you might have about how they could be done differently
/ better -- this will come in very handy when you're writing things up
later!
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Set up a web site (Start by copying a previous year's site)
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Make sure the main conference web site has a link to your web site and
prominently advertises the student session
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Make sure the ACL web site links to your web site
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Decide on the format to be used (posters/presentations/both), the timeline
and reviewing procedures. Click here
for a discussion of formats. Deadlines should line up with the main conference
to the extent possible and should not fall on religious holidays.
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Start thinking about sources of student funding. This is an ongoing process
from now until the conference happens. Student funding comes from many
sources and you need to be knowledgeable about it even if you're not managing
it because students/potential authors will ask you questions. Work with
the Exec and PC to decide whether there will be volunteer opportunities
for students at the conference. Volunteers typically receive technical
session registration fee waivers and 1-yr membership to ACL. They don't
receive complimentary registration to tutorials and workshops; however,
an attempt is made to assign volunteers who indicate interest in particular
tutorials or workshops to those sessions as "monitors". Work with the Exec/Treasurer
to see if travel grants will be available from the organization (like Walker
grants at ACL events). There should be a person on the main conference
planning committee responsible for soliciting corporate sponsors for the
conference. Make sure funding student events and/or underwriting student
travel are included in the categories of funding he/she is suggesting to
people. Work with your faculty advisor (who will be the PI) to write and
submit a grant proposal for government funding if desired (eg. NSF or European
Commission).
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Set up an opt-in email list for students to get news and communicate with
each other about the session. NAACL/ANLP 2000 used egroups.com Put a link
on your site so people can enroll.
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Make sure you are aware of any official policies of the organization regarding
planning the student session. For example, the ACL Exec has adopted a policy
that student papers should not be bound with the main conference papers.
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Writing and Distributing the Call For Papers
The CFP should include information you've pinned down as definite,
and should be vague on other things that are not yet determined. As a minimum,
it should have an overview of the intent of the session, the intended topic
areas, and submission instructions and deadlines. It should be created
as a stand-alone document with all contact information fully specified
(i.e. don't just point people to the web page for details).
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If a joint conference, decide if there is separate review/submission
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Decide a policy on joint submission to other conferences. Joint submission
to student and main session should be prohibited based on the different
intent of the sessions
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Decide what restrictions you will place on student authors: i.e. all
authors must be
(a) fulltime or not
(b) PhD only, Master's and PhD, all university students, any student
(c) pre-proposal, post-proposal
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Decide whether you will ask for proof of student status with the submission
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Determine which co-chair (or both) will receive submissions
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Set up a mailid to receive communication if you don't want to use your
own id
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Double-check all templates: create .bst, .sty, and Word templates and
sample papers. Test them and load them to web site. Make sure they keep
author information hidden and use a double-spaced format for reviewers.
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Decide whether to have a separate 'intent to submit' process. This helps
you plan how many reviewers you need, and from which areas. A downside
is that people who otherwise might submit a paper may not do it if they
miss the deadline for submitting an intent, and if people submit an intent
and not a paper it wastes your time.
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The CFP must usually be vague about grant support for students, since
you probably won't know about that yet when the CFP needs to go out.
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Ask for files to be sent in postscript + fonts or Word. You don't want
latex source.
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Write the CFP, post to your web site in HTML and ascii format (an 'easy-print'
version)
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The CFP must be approved by the Conference program chair
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Wait for Main conference CFP to be finished before finalizing yours.
You can get topic areas and general information from it
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Develop a list of categories or keywords for papers (the conference
topic areas may suffice; and include an "other" category); ask authors
to give one or more categories for their paper; the same list will be used
when asking potential reviewers for their areas of interest
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The ACL Business Manager (currently Priscilla Rasmussen) will send out
the CFP and post it to the ACL website, sigs, and bboards. You should post
to additional lists that you may know of (like Linguist).
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After the call goes out, touch base with the person assigned to solicit
corporate funding for the conference to make sure 'funding student events'
is one of the categories of funding being suggested to potential sponsors.
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Receiving and Reviewing papers
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Start working on recruiting reviewers immediately after sending out
CFP
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The review committee as a whole needs to be somewhat balance industry/academia,
geographic (i.e. by continent), areas of interest, student/non-student,gender,etc.
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When asking reviewers for their interests, use the same list of categories/keywords
that you asked authors to use for their papers; this will make grouping
reviewers with papers much easier!
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You have to make a guess at how many papers you'll get and make sure
you have enough reviewers.
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The review committee (especially non-student members) must be approved
by the Exec.
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How to get names of people to ask? People who did it for previous conferences,
people who volunteered at the previous event, maybe it's possible to get
a membership list from your organization, personal contacts.
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Be prepared to handle alot of email traffic the week that paper submissions
are due (not only submissions but you get alot of questions/requests for
information).
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Submitted papers come in
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Make sure papers can be printed/viewed. In some cases one cochair can
print a paper that the other can't.
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Assign paper id numbers (if you didn't have a pre-submission process)
and respond to authors to confirm that their paper was received and prints
ok.
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Assign reviewers to papers. Allow yourself 1-2 weeks for this, it's
pretty tricky to get all the papers to a reviewer that works in the correct
area. You can't depend on the keywords provided by the authors, you usually
have to read the papers and assign your own keywords to them. How many
papers can each reviewer handle? Probably not more than 4-5 per reviewer.
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Must assign student and non-student reviewers to each paper.
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Send papers to reviewers
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Sanitize papers first if reviewing is blind.
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The easiest way to distribute papers is to load them to a web site.
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Send a note to the reviewers to make sure they were able to print/view
their papers about 1 week after sending them the papers.
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Send reminder notice to reviewers 1 week before reviews are due.
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Receive and collate reviews. A spreadsheet is typically helpful.
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Accepting Papers
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Before deciding how many papers to accept, negotiate the page count
allowed by the PC for student papers in the proceedings, since there will
be a tradeoff -- the more papers accepted, the shorter the papers in the
proceedings. 3 pages is the absolute minimum, try very hard to get more.
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Decide whether to accept an alternate paper, in case the author of an
accepted paper is unable to attend at the last minute.
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Decide how to weigh the various reviewing categories, whether non-student
reviews carry more weight, etc. Making acceptance decisions takes about
2 weeks.
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Typically there are about 1/3 clear rejects and 1/3 clear accepts just
from the numerical parts of the reviews. For the remainder, you have to
read the reviews carefully, take the written comments into consideration,
and read the papers if necessary.
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One thing you may want to take into account is if the student is working
at an institution where it may be difficult for him/her to get good feedback,
i.e. because they don't have a strong CL program or the school has no money
for students to travel to conferences.
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Send acceptance/rejection notification to the designated contact authors
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Sanitize reviews and email to authors (remove reviewer identifying information
and any comments that were specifically addressed to the cochairs)
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Decide which co-chair (or both) will receive final papers.
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Update templates and model paper with the final format. Test templates
to make sure Word and Latex styles come out the same. Format should probably
be consistent with main conference format.
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Post author instructions for final papers and copyright form
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Miscellaneous stuff to work on after the accepted
papers are chosen
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Finalize the program and post on web site. Try to keep breaks lined
up with other events. This needs to be done immediately when accepted papers
are selected so that the registration brochure can go out.
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Write the Call for Participation. The ACL business manager will send
it out in electronic form and also in the hard-copy registration brochure.
You may need to prepare it in slightly different formats for the two mailings.
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Find out how much money is available for travel grants (corporate gifts
or Walker fund), Decide on the criteria for awarding grants, exactly what
categories of expenses the grant will cover, will registration fees be
waived, etc. (Registration fees have generally been waived in the past
for volunteers, and refunded as part of the grant for travel grant recipients.)
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Announce availability of travel grants and post applications on the
web site
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Make sure international authors start working immediately on getting
visitor visas to the country hosting the conference, and produce any supporting
documents they need.
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If you're running it as a separate 'workshop' event, make sure there
will not be a charge. Make sure all versions of the registration brochure
specify that the workshop is included when you pay for the main conference.
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Recruiting/Assigning Panelists (if you use that
format)
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Contact people in same areas as papers. It's nice to get a mix of industry
and academic people. You can do some preliminary work to get a list of
potential panelists together, but don't contact people to ask them to be
a panelist until the list of accepted papers is finalized and the final
program is posted (because potential panelists need to know whether they
have a conflict with the time).
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How to get suggestions of people to ask? Look over the main conference
program to find established researchers who are planning to attend the
conference. Ask the NAACL officers and conference program committee. Ask
your faculty advisor and thesis advisor for suggestions.
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Assign panelists to papers. Two panelists per paper is sufficient, with
approximately 1-2 papers per panelist. .
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Decide whether to allow authors to submit additional information "for
panelists' eyes only" (e.g., extended papers, links to websites, etc.)
-- especially if proceeding versions of papers are short (e.g., 3 pages);
decide on format for submission of this information, let authors and panelists
know about it
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Printing and binding final papers
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Final versions of papers come in. Make sure the copy is legible and
there's no formatting problems with the papers and they adhere to your
formatting guidelines.
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Make sure you get the signed copyright release form for all papers,
send the copyright forms to the ACL office (ACL, 75 Paterson Street, Suite
9 New Brunswick, NJ 08901). It's ok for only the first author to sign,
but preferable if all authors sign (according to Priscilla).
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Make a table of contents and whatever indexes you want (index by author
last name, for example) to send to the printer (they don't make them for
you). Leave page numbers off.
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Make sure at least one author of each paper has registered for the conference
before sending the papers to the printer.
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Write the preface to the student session to be included in the proceedings.
This should thank everyone who contributed (faculty advisor, reviewers,
panelists, etc.) and describe the reviewing process and the number of submitted
and accepted papers.
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Get the address of the company handling printing of the proceedings
from PC
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Resolve binding issue: will the student papers be bound with main conference
papers? In a separate workshop proceedings? Some other way? The current
ACL policy (as of 10/2000) is to bind them separately.
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Send final versions of papers to printer. The printer can fix things
like ink that is a little too light or papers printed on A4-size paper.
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Send papers to the panelists (if you're using panelists), or make them
available on a web site
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Pre-conference preparation
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Write a summary to present at the business meeting, find out what meetings
you need to attend at the conference
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Set up the social program, find out if you have money for the social
program, try to get money contributed/allocated for social program
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Send instructions to authors on preparing their presentations or posters
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Send instructions to panelists (i.e. what is their committment, what
do you want them to do)
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Assign session chairs to introduce and time paper presentations. Make
yourself some 'you have 5 minutes', etc. signs. It's important to show
a sign at the half-way point.
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Double-check with the local arrangements people that your room is reserved
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Organize volunteers or recruit someone else to manage that (typically
volunteers get registration waived)
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Make feedback forms to take to the session
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Decide how you will recruit reviewers for the next year, either by posting
a signup sheet, circulating signup sheets at the sessions, etc.
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Running the session
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Plan a way to publicize the event during the conference. We put flyers
on the registration table.
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Post a sheet on the notice board for people to sign up to be reviewers
for the next year.
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Distribute/collect feedback forms
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Take a headcount or make a list of audience members that attend the
event. This is necessary for future planning, to determine whether the
format was a success, and to include in post-mortem reports.
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Make sure you have a pointer, blank slides, markers, and water for the
speakers.Also, make sure you have an extra bulb for the overhead projector
(it may be inside the projector). Make sure you know who to contact for
support if you have technical difficulties.
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Plan social activities, find a place to publicize social events Also,
plan a way for students to contact each other for informal social activities.
Maybe put a sign-up sheet on the notice board.
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Make time for the students to have practice talks? The 1999 ACL student
cochairs did this.
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Present summary at the general business meeting.
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Hold a student business meeting. Probably hold it on the next-to-last
day so people have a chance to find out about it. Use it to discuss student
involvement in ACL in general, and issues relating to student research
at the conference, how they liked this year's format, etc.
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Recruit new cochairs. Talk to people during breaks and at the student
meeting, take down names to give to the NAACL exec.
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Post-conference Fallout: Do ASAP after the event
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Help students if they need help submitting expenses and getting reimbursements
(if you had a grant)
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Make a summary to send to granting agency. Wait until all reimbursements
have been sent out.
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Write up your lessons learned and summarize your feedback from the session.
Do this immediately after the conference before you forget!
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Propose cochairs for next year to Exec. They should be from different
geographic areas if possible and different areas of CL.
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Hand over documents relating to the session and spreadsheets on the
submissions, acceptances and recommendations for funding to the ACL secretary.
Last modified August 9, 2000 by Donna Byron