Last Call – LAK23 Call For Papers Submission Deadline Oct. 3rd

Final Call for submissions for the following tracks for LAK23 – Research Full & Short papers, Practitioner and Workshops/Tutorials.

The submission deadline is October 3, 2022 at 23:59  (AOE Timezone)

Full Call for Papers and Submission Guidelines are available on the LAK23 website.

In-person and Virtual participation will be available.

GENERAL CALL

The 2023 edition of The International Conference on Learning Analytics & Knowledge (LAK23) will take place in Arlington, Texas, USA. LAK23 is organized by the Society for Learning Analytics Research (SoLAR) with location hosts from University of Texas at Arlington. LAK23 is a collaborative effort by learning analytics researchers and practitioners to share the most rigorous scientific work in learning analytics

The theme for the 13th annual LAK conference is Toward Trustworthy Learning Analytics. The growth and development of the learning analytics field has been fuelled through increased access to data and the subsequent development of analytical models designed to predict outcomes, establish recommendations or bring novel insights into the learning process. Yet the implementation of learning analytics impinges on social and educational concerns such as privacy, fairness, and development of learner autonomy. The application of learning analytics must consider how developed models can lead to the reinforcement, identification or prevention of bias. Ongoing work into data and algorithmic transparency can help inform how end users interpret and enact LA information and recommendations. There is further work to be undertaken by researchers and practitioners to fully examine the impact of data and algorithms including: potential misuse and mis-interpretation; influence on society and education systems; ethics;  privacy; transparency; and accountability to move toward a responsible education system that is established on a foundation of trust.

The LAK conference is intended for both researchers and practitioners. We invite both researchers and practitioners of learning analytics to join a proactive dialogue around the future of learning analytics and its practical adoption, to develop and transfer key knowledge to design, interpret and act on learning analytics results. We further extend our invite to educators, leaders, administrators, government and industry professionals interested in the field of learning analytics and its related disciplines.

Authors should note that:

  • SoLAR recognizes the importance of open, accessible, reproducible, repeatable, and replicable data and analyses approaches. SoLAR also recognizes a diversity of epistemological, ethical, and legal challenges and opportunities which such approaches face.
  • The LAK conference has received a CORE ranking of A (top 16% of all 783 ranked venues).
  • LAK is the only conference in the top 12 Google Scholar citation ranks for educational technology publications.

CONFERENCE THEME AND TOPICS

We welcome submissions from both research and practice, encompassing different theoretical, methodological, empirical and technical contributions to the learning analytics field. Learning analytics research draws on many distinct academic fields, including psychology, the learning sciences, education, neuroscience, computer science and design. We encourage the submission of works conducted in any of these traditions. We also welcome research that validates, replicates and examines the generalizability of previously published findings, as well as examines aspects of adoption of existing learning analytics methods and approaches.

This year, we encourage contributors to consider how collective action can tackle concerns and issues associated with the implementation of learning analytics. Learning analytics impacts on both technical and social systems. We invite papers that address areas of bias, privacy, ethics, transparency and accountability from multiple lenses including the design, implementation and evaluation stages of learning analytics. Accountable analysis refers to providing a certain degree of transparency and explanation, and adjusting the transparency of data and computation according to the differences of stakeholders. Trust goes hand in hand with transparency in decision-making; whether the decisions for predictions and interventions are fair and explainable is an ethical issue. There is still much to be done in human behavior and social values, such as respecting privacy, providing equal opportunities, and accountability. Based on diversity, equity, and belonging, inclusive learning analytics identifies and breaks down systemic barriers to inclusion, fosters a culture that every learner knows their belonging, feels empowered to bring their whole self to learning, and is inspired to learn.

For the 13th Annual conference, we encourage authors to address the following questions related to LAK23’s theme of “Towards Trustworthy Learning Analytics:

  • What are the essential components of building a trustworthy LA system?
  • How do we give diverse stakeholders a voice in defining what will make LA trustworthy?
  • How can we develop and evaluate instruments or frameworks for measuring the trustworthiness of a LA system?
  • Is there anything distinctive about trustworthiness in teaching and learning or can we borrow unproblematically from notions of trustworthiness from other fields?
  • How can we develop models or frameworks that can measure the fairness, bias, transparency or explainability level of a LA system?
  • How do we develop human-in-the-loop predictive or prescriptive analytics that benefit from instructor judgement?
  • How can we enable students or instructors to share their perceptions of the level of trustworthiness of a LA system?
  • How can we reliably and transparently model student competencies?

Other topics of interest include, but are not limited to, the following:

Implementing Change in Learning & Teaching:

  • Ethical issues around learning analytics: Analysis of issues and approaches to the lawful and ethical capture and use of educational data traces; tackling unintended bias and value judgements in the selection of data and algorithms; perspectives and methods that empower stakeholders.
  • Learning analytics adoption: Discussions and evaluations of strategies to promote and embed learning analytics initiatives in educational institutions and learning organizations. Studies that examine processes of organizational change and practices of professional development that support impactful learning analytics use.
  • Learning analytics strategies for scalability: Discussions and evaluations of strategies to scale capture and analysis of information in useful and ethical ways at the program, institution or national level; critical reflections on organizational structures that promote analytics innovation and impact in an institution.
  • Equity, fairness and transparency in learning analytics: Consideration of how certain practices of data collection, analysis and subsequent action impact particular populations and affect human well-being, specifically groups that experience long term disadvantage. Discussions of how learning analytics may impact (positively or negatively) social change and transformative social justice.

Understanding Learning & Teaching:

  • Data-informed learning theories: Proposals of new learning/teaching theories or revisions/reinterpretations of existing theories based on large-scale data analysis.
  • Insights into specific learning processes: Studies to understand particular aspects of a learning/teaching process through the use of data science techniques, including negative results.
  • Learning and teaching modeling: Creating mathematical, statistical or computational models of a learning/teaching process, including its actors and context.
  • Systematic reviews: Studies that provide a systematic and methodological synthesis of the available evidence in an area of learning analytics.

Evidencing Learning & Teaching:

  • Finding evidence of learning: Studies that identify and explain useful data for analysing, understanding and optimising learning and teaching.
  • Assessing student learning: Studies that assess learning progress through the computational analysis of learner actions or artefacts.
  • Analytical and methodological approaches: Studies that introduce novel analytical techniques, methods, and tools for modelling student learning.
  • Technological infrastructures for data storage and sharing: Proposals of technical and methodological procedures to store, share and preserve learning and teaching traces, taking appropriate ethical considerations into account.

Impacting Learning & Teaching:

  • Human-centered design processes: Research that documents practices of giving an active voice to learners, teachers, and other educational stakeholders in the design process of learning analytics initiatives and enabling technologies.
  • Providing decision support and feedback: Studies that evaluate the use and impact of feedback or decision-support systems based on learning analytics (dashboards, early-alert systems, automated messages, etc.).
  • Data-informed decision-making: Studies that examine how teachers, students or other educational stakeholders come to, work with and make changes using learning analytics information.
  • Personalised and adaptive learning: Studies that evaluate the effectiveness and impact of adaptive technologies based on learning analytics.
  • Practical evaluations of learning analytics efforts:  Empirical evidence about the effectiveness of learning analytics implementations or educational initiatives guided by learning analytics.

For the Full Call for Papers and Submission Guidelines please visit the LAK23 website.