Invited Speakers for 2009 Conference Announced
Manchester (UK), July 2009 - The Association for Learning Technology (ALT) has announced the nine invited speakers for this year's conference, titled "In dreams begins responsibility - choice, evidence, and change." The conference takes place from 8-10 September 2009 in Manchester, UK.
The nine invited speakers join the three keynote speakers plus many other leading lights in the learning technology sector who will be running workshops, seminars, and poster sessions.
Seb Schmoller, Chief Executive of ALT, comments, "We've invited speakers with the aim of giving delegates a wide mix of sessions led by people with interesting and relevant ideas to convey, sitting alongside the more traditional program of short and long papers, workshops, keynote speakers, symposia, and demonstrations."
The invited speakers who have now been confirmed are:
- Jonathan Drori, CBE, Director, Changing Media
- Heather Fry, Head of Learning and Teaching, HEFCE
- Diana Laurillard, Professor of Learning with Digital Technologies at the Institute of Education
- Dr Matthew McFall, Learning Sciences Research Institute and School of Education, University of Nottingham
- David Kennedy, Director and Associate Professor, Teaching and Learning Centre, Lingnan University, Hong Kong
- Richard Noss, Co-director of the London Knowledge Lab
- Vanessa Pittard, Director of Evidence and Evaluation, Becta
- Aaron Porter, Vice President (Higher Education) of the National Union of Students (NUS)
- David Price, co-founder of http://debategraph.org
The conference co-chairs are Gilly Salmon, Professor of eLearning and learning technologies at the University of Leicester, UK, and Professor Tom Boyle, Director of the Learning Technology Research Institute at London Metropolitan University, UK.
Seb Schmoller adds, "The lineup of speakers and session leaders this year reflects our emphasis on learning from history, spreading innovation, cost effectiveness, developing research culture, and redesigning pedagogy. Session topics include: the VLE is dead, cost effectiveness in design, collaborative learning, and realising dreams: avoiding nightmares."