CFP
ACM CAPWIC 2024: ACM The Capital Region Celebration of Women in Computing Conference 2024 Charlottesville, VA, United States, April 5-6, 2024 |
Conference website | https://capwic.org/ |
Submission link | https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=capwic2024 |
Conference program | https://easychair.org/smart-program/ACMCAPWIC2024/ |
Submission deadline | February 12, 2024 |
CAPWIC 2024, the ACM Capital Region Celebration of Women in Computing, will be held at the University of Virginia, in Charlottesville, VA. The goal of CAPWIC is to bring together female students and allies to promote the recruitment, retention, and progression of women in computing fields.
Submission Guidelines
We invite submissions in the area of computing research as well as on efforts to increase diversity in computing in the following formats:
- Flash Talks: Five-minute presentations with five minutes for questions. Fast-paced talks on preliminary results, work-in progress, or anything fun and creative related to the conference are welcome in this category. All levels of experience are welcome.
- Student Posters: Before the conference, presenters create a 24” x 32” poster of research, a class project, or other type of work-in-progress including efforts to diversify computing and are present at the poster during the session to discuss content. Open to all students. Prizes will be awarded.
- Student Research Shorts: Research shorts are an opportunity to give a 15-minute presentation with an additional 5 minutes for questions, similar to a talk at a research conference. Work should be technical in nature, investigating new ideas in any area of computer science. The intention is to give presenters a friendly environment in which to practice a future technical talk or work out details in an ongoing project to get constructive feedback. Only an abstract is required, so future publication of the work is not limited.
- Technical Workshops: Workshops present a valuable and current technical skill in a hands-on training session. Proposals must include abstract, the intended audience and power/AV equipment/space needs.
- Panels: Panels present multiple perspectives on a topic. Proposals should include an abstract, a list of presenters including their affiliation and perspective, along with a proposed length of 25 or 50 minutes.
- Birds-of-a-Feather: Birds-of-a-feather (BOF) sessions are opportunities for a group of participants with similar concerns to have an informal discussion. BOF sessions will be 30 minutes.
- Technical Talks: 25 minute technical talk with 5 minutes for questions on a relevant and current technical topic. Priority given to younger faculty and industry partners.
Contact
All questions about submissions should be emailed to Dr. Jason Forsyth, Program Chair, at forsy2jb@jmu.edu.