First Call for Papers - GSE Annual Research Conference
Deadline for Abstracts - 22 February 2019
A School of Education research event | |
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Date | 5 - 22 February 2019 |
Place | Baring Court |
Provider | School of Education |
Intended audience | All staff and students |
Registration information | Details to be announced soon |
Event details
First Call for Proposals
We would like to invite all staff, PGCE and doctoral students to present at the 2019 Graduate School of Education Annual Education Research Conference taking place at the St Luke’s Campus, University of Exeter on Friday, March 22, 2019. We would also welcome presentations from doctoral students from other universities.
We encourage you to share your research with the GSE research community to:
- disseminate your research;
- receive helpful feedback on your presentation and paper;
- be part of a vibrant research community and its research centres and networks;
- promote your research centres and research groups;
- join our social activities.
Proposals
Abstracts should be no longer than 300 words and submitted to: gseaerc@exeter.ac.uk
Please use the following filenames:
- Poster Family name, Initial (e.g. Poster Dillon J)
- Round-table Family name, Initial (e.g. Round-table Dillon J)
- Paper Family name, Initial (e.g. Paper Dillon J)
- Symposium Family name, Initial (e.g. Symposium Dillon J)
Important deadlines
February 22: Deadline for proposal submissions
March 1: Notification of acceptance
Registration and costs
Attendance at this conference is free, and open to all.
Details about the conference registration will be circulated shortly.
Session Formats
- Paper sessions: Oral presentations of four papers; each presentation will be for 15 minutes followed by a discussion with the audience.
- Poster sessions Posters should outline research planned, in progress or completed. A1 (594mm by 841mm) size is recommended although other sizes will also be accepted.
- Symposia: an opportunity for established groups of researchers within the school to present several papers together on a shared theme. This would be an ideal format for research centres and networks to share their work with colleagues. The structure of the symposium can be flexible to suit the needs of the proposed focus but typically consists of three contrasting papers and a discussion or synthesis.