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Call for Panel and Paper Proposals

Opening the Information Economy

IEEE International Professional Communication Conference

July 13-16, 2008
Concordia University , Montréal , Canada

 
         

FALL 2007
Volume 17, Issue 2

Articles

Better Graduate-Level Technical and Scientific Communication Education Supported: House, Senate and President Pass New National Legislation
Karen Kurt Teal University of Washington

Benefits of Team Teaching a Course in Multiple Genres with Literature Faculty
Ken Baake - Texas Tech

CFPs

11 th Annual ATTW Conference: “Connecting Communities”

New Technological Spaces: Mastering the Literacies of Thinking and Doing across Multiple Modalities.
Special Issue of Technical Communication Quarterly

Virtual Worlds and Technical Communication
Special Issue of Technical Communication

Composition in the Freeware Age: Assessing the Impact and Value of the Web 2.0 Movement for the Teaching of Writing, Computers, and Composition
Guest-edited by Randall McClure, Michael Day, and Mike Palmquist

Community Literacy Journal

Gender and Technology Area of the
Southwest/Texas Popular & American Cultural Association

Opening the Information Economy
IEEE International Professional Communication Conference

Kairos Logo Design Contest

Call for Gould Award Nominees

Announcements

Minutes of the ATTW Executive Committee

New Society for Technical Communication Academic Programs Database Available

Students Sought for Society for Technical Communication Honor Societies

Upcoming Conferences

In Memorium: Victoria Mikelonis

ATTW Bulletin Archive

 

 

The information economy is based on the collection and the exchange of data and ideas. We all either contribute to or use materials from the information economy in most aspects of our everyday lives. As a result, the information economy exists as an environment in which we are all contributors and consumers. Within this system, effective communication is essential to success, allowing individuals to contribute ideas and information effectively and to make efficient use of the goods and services. Few of us, however, understand all of the nuances of the information economy or the communication factors that affect its operations.

This conference seeks to examine or to “open” this economic model by examining the connections between communication practices and the products, practices, and services that constitute the information economy. The objective of such an examination will be to help attendees better understand and participate in the information economy as both contributors and consumers.

The conference will take place on the campus of Concordia University in Montréal , Canada and will consist of paper presentations and panel discussions that focus on various communication, design, social, and cultural aspects of the information economy.

Possible Topic Areas

Suggested topic areas include but are not limited to the following:

  • Establishing and assessing the value of knowledge work and knowledge products
  • Information design, usability, and accessibility
  • Virtual teams, online collaboration, and distributed models of work
  • Cross-cultural communication, globalization, outsourcing, translation, and localization
  • Legal policies and social issues related to the information economy
  • Media selection and multimodality
  • The role of and perspectives on teaching and training within the information economy
  • Content management, open source software, single sourcing, and XML

Proposal Submission Process and Submission Dates

Send 1-2 page (250-500 word) proposals to IPCC2008@gmail.com by

  • 15 October 2007 (deadline for submissions to be considered for early acceptance)
  • 15 December 2007 (deadline for regular submissions)

For conference- or proposal-related questions contact: IPCC2008@gmail.com