PanelsSIGCSE TS 2025
Panel sessions provide an opportunity for expert panelists to present their views on a specific topic, and then to discuss these views among themselves and with the audience. Usually, a panel session starts with a brief introduction of the panel topic and the participants, followed by short presentations by the panelists giving their views. Panel sessions are scheduled for 75 minutes total, but keep in mind that successful panels must allow sufficient opportunity (about 30 minutes) for an interactive question-and-answer (Q&A) period involving both the panelists and the audience.
When assembling a panel, we encourage authors to carefully consider ACM’s guidance for Building Diverse Teams. A typical panel will consist of four participants, including the moderator. Limiting a panel to four participants allows sufficient time for audience questions. Proposals with more than four panelists must convincingly show that all panelists will be able to speak, and the audience able to respond, within the session time.
Authors submitting work to SIGCSE TS 2025 are responsible for complying with all applicable conference authorship policies and those articulated by ACM. If you have questions about any of these policies, please contact program@sigcse2025.sigcse.org for clarification prior to submission.
Author Restriction A single author may appear on no more than four total panel and special session submissions combined. Should more than four submissions be received with a given author, only the first four will be reviewed and all others will be desk rejected. This interim policy is intended to promote greater diversity in authorship on these tracks.
ACM has made a commitment to collect ORCiD IDs from all published authors (https://authors.acm.org/author-resources/orcid-faqs). All authors on each submission must have an ORCiD ID (https://orcid.org/register) in order to complete the submission process. Please make sure to get your ORCID ID in advance of submitting your work.
Presentation Modality
All authors of accepted panel submissions in this track must register and be present in-person at the conference. A limited number of Panels will be selected by the chairs for live streaming, but all of the presenters need to be there in the room to facilitate this because what is streamed is from a camera in the conference room.
This program is tentative and subject to change.
Thu 27 FebDisplayed time zone: Eastern Time (US & Canada) change
10:45 - 12:00 | |||
10:45 75mTalk | How We Did It: Integrating Inclusive Design across the Undergraduate Computer Science CurriculumHybrid Panels Patricia Morreale Kean University, Margaret Burnett Oregon State University, Kyle Harms Cornell University, Daehan Kwak Kean University |
10:45 - 12:00 | |||
10:45 75mTalk | U.S. Government-Funded Opportunities for CS Educators Panels Joel Adams Calvin University, Cynthia Bailey Stanford University, Suzanne Matthews United States Military Academy, Paul Tymann Rochester Institute of Technology |
13:45 - 15:00 | |||
13:45 75mTalk | Sharing Courses, Faculty, and Resources across Universities: An Argument for Cross-Institution Courses and Localized Support Structures Panels |
15:45 - 17:00 | |||
15:45 75mTalk | Innovative Approaches to CS Education Research that Enable All Students’ SuccessHybrid Panels Monica McGill Institute for Advancing Computing Education, Joseph Carroll-Miranda University of Puerto Rico, Rio Piedras Campus, Joshua Childs The University of Texas at Austin, Stefanie Marshall Michigan State University, Tamara Pearson Georgia Institute of Technology |
15:45 - 17:00 | |||
15:45 75mTalk | Addressing Challenges in Teaching-Track Faculty Promotion Panels Christine Alvarado UC San Diego, Nate Derbinsky Northeastern University, Sarah Heckman North Carolina State University, Manuel A. Pérez-Quiñones UNC Charlotte, Harini Ramaprasad UNC Charlotte, Mark Sherriff University of Virginia |
Fri 28 FebDisplayed time zone: Eastern Time (US & Canada) change
10:45 - 12:00 | |||
10:45 75mTalk | Theorizing & Researching Class for Broadening Participation in Computing Efforts Hybrid Panels Michael Lachney Michigan State University, Yolanda Rankin Emory University, Kimberly Scott Arizona State University, Rafi Santo Telos Learning, Randy Connolly Mount Royal University |
10:45 - 12:00 | |||
10:45 75mTalk | How to Teach Software Engineering for Societal and Social Impact Panels Amy Csizmar Dalal Carleton College, Stan Kurkovsky Central Connecticut State University, Patricia Morreale Kean University, Michael Goldweber Xavier University |
13:45 - 15:00 | |||
13:45 75mTalk | Imminent updates to AP® Computer Science AK12 Panels Don Blaheta Longwood University, Deborah Klipp College Board, Daniel Klag College Board, Rob Schultz Bellbrook High School |
15:45 - 17:00 | |||
15:45 75mTalk | Engaging K12 Computer Science Students in Critical Examination of Technology, Justice, Ethics, and SocietyHybrid Panels Shana V. White Kapor Center, Allison Scott Kapor Center for Social Impact, Aman Yadav Michigan State University, Sepehr Vakil Northwestern University |
15:45 - 17:00 | |||
15:45 75mTalk | Lessons Learned from Supporting Student-Teachers as Lead University Instructors Panels Justin Hsia University of Washington, Seattle, Daniel Garcia University of California Berkeley, Sarah Heckman North Carolina State University, Swapneel Sheth University of Pennsylvania |
Sat 1 MarDisplayed time zone: Eastern Time (US & Canada) change
10:45 - 12:00 | |||
10:45 75mTalk | Building research capacity through collaboration with MSIs: Broadening Participation in Computing ResearchMSI Panels Kinnis Gosha Morehouse College, Patricia Morreale Kean University, Talitha Washington Clark Atlanta University |
13:45 - 15:00 | |||
13:45 75mTalk | Championing Computer Science in the Early Elementary GradesHybridK12 Panels Laycee Thigpen Institute for Advancing Computing Education, Alexis Cobo CSforALL, Michelle Flaherty Union City Area School District, Allison Master University of Houston, Jigar Patel Tuscarora Intermediate Unit 11, Aman Yadav Michigan State University |
13:45 - 15:00 | |||
13:45 75mTalk | Bachelor’s Degree Pathways Through Community Colleges: Opportunities and Promises for Advancing Equity in Computing CC Panels Jennifer Blaney University of Georgia, Jill Denner DigitalNEST, Ivy Love New America, Christian Servin El Paso Community College |
Accepted Panels
Deadlines and Submission
Panel submissions consist of a 2-page extended abstract about the work including a 250-word short abstract, additional content about the work, and references. Panel submissions to the SIGCSE TS 2025 must be made through EasyChair no later than Sunday, 21 July 2024. The track chairs reserve the right to desk reject submissions that are incomplete after the deadline has passed.
Important Dates
Due Date | Sunday, 21 July 2024 |
Due Time | 23:59 AoE (Anywhere on Earth, UTC-12h) |
Submission Limits | 2 pages (including a 250-word abstract) |
Notification to Authors | Monday 30 September 2024 tentative |
Submission Link | https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=sigcsets2025 |
Session Duration | 75 minutes |
Instructions for Authors
Authors may find it useful to read the Instruction for Reviewers and the Review Form to understand how their submissions will be reviewed. Also note that when submitting, you will need to provide between 3-7 related topics from the Topics list under Info.
Sample Panel Submission
Here is a Sample Panel Submission with Notes that has some notes/tips and shows the required sections.
Abstracts
All panel submissions must have a plain-text abstract of up to 250 words. Abstracts should not contain subheadings or citations. The abstract should be submitted in EasyChair along with the submission metadata, and it should be included in the PDF version of the submission at the appropriate location.
Submission Templates
SIGCSE TS 2025 is not participating in the new ACM workflow, template, and production system. All panel submissions must be in English and formatted using the 2-column ACM SIG Conference Proceedings format and US letter size pages (8.5x11 inch or 215.9 x 279.4mm).
Page Limits: Panel submissions are limited to a maximum of 2 pages of body content (including all titles, author information, abstract, main text, tables and illustrations, acknowledgements, and references).
MS Word Authors: Please use the interim Word template provided by ACM.
LaTeX Authors:
- Overleaf provides a suitable two-column sig conference proceedings template.
- Other LaTeX users may alternatively use the ACM Primary template, adding the “
sigconf
” format option in thedocumentclass
to obtain the 2-column format.
Requirement for Single Anonymous Review Process: At the time of submission all entries should include author information, an abstract, body content, references, and placeholders for the ACM Reference Format and copyright blocks. Each author should be defined separately for accurate metadata identification.
Other requirements: Include space for authors’ e-mail addresses whenever possible on separate lines. Even if multiple authors have the same affiliation, grouping authors’ names or e-mail addresses, or providing an ‘e-mail alias’ is not acceptable, e.g., {brian,lina,leenkiat}@university.edu
or firstname.lastname@college.org
. Panel submissions should include from the standard ACM template: keywords, CCS Concepts and ACM Reference Format.
Desk Rejects: Submissions that do not adhere to page limits or formatting requirements will be desk rejected without review.
Accessibility: SIGCSE TS 2025 authors are strongly encouraged to prepare submissions using these templates in such a manner that the content is widely accessible to potential reviewers, track chairs, and readers. Please see these resources for preparing an accessible submission.
Additional Format Instructions
Authors submitting to the panel track should use the standardized section names and additional formatting information when preparing their proposals.
- When providing author information, indicate which of the panelists is the moderator by placing the word “Moderator” in parentheses after their name.
- Abstract: Should provide a brief summary (up to 250 words) of your panel.
- Summary: The first section should be titled Summary and should provide an expanded summary of the panel’s goals, intended audience, and relevance to the SIGCSE community.
- Panel Structure: The section following the summary should explain the panel structure and plan for audience participation, and provide sufficient time for audience interaction and questions.
- Position Statements: The subsequent sections should contain the position statements of each panelist and a brief description of their expertise and background as it relates to the panel. Title each section by identifying the panelist.
- References: Citing relevant work where appropriate is encouraged, but not required. If references are included, they should be placed in a separate section titled References and should follow the ACM formatting guidelines.
Single Anonymized Review
Submissions to the panel track are reviewed with the single-anonymous review process. Submissions should include author names and affiliations. Thus, the author identities are known to reviewers, but reviewers are anonymous to each other and to the authors.
The reviewing process includes a discussion phase after initial reviews have been submitted. During this time, the reviewers can examine all reviews and privately discuss the strengths and weaknesses of the work in an anonymous manner through EasyChair. This discussion information can be used by the track chairs in addition to the content of the review in making final acceptance decisions.
The SIGCSE TS 2025 review process does not have a rebuttal period for authors to respond to comments, and all acceptance decisions are final.
ACM Policies
By submitting your article to an ACM Publication, you are hereby acknowledging that you and your co-authors are subject to all ACM Publications Policies, including ACM’s new Publications Policy on Research Involving Human Participants and Subjects (https://www.acm.org/publications/policies/research-involving-human-participants-and-subjects). Alleged violations of this policy or any ACM Publications Policy will be investigated by ACM and may result in a full retraction of your paper, in addition to other potential penalties, as per ACM Publications Policy. See also the authorship policies.
ACM has made a commitment to collect ORCiD IDs from all published authors (https://authors.acm.org/author-resources/orcid-faqs). All authors on each submission must have an ORCiD ID (https://orcid.org/register) in order to complete the submission process. Please make sure to get your ORCID ID in advance of submitting your work.
Author Checklist
Additional details are in the instructions for authors.
Getting ready
- Make sure that all authors have obtained an ORCiD identifier. These identifiers are required for paper submission.
- Check the author list carefully now and review with your co-authors. The authors on the submission must be the same as the authors on the final version of the work (assuming the work is accepted). Authors may not be added or removed after submission and must also appear in the same order as in the submission.
- Identify at least one author who is willing to review for the symposium. Have that author or those authors sign up to review at https://tinyurl.com/review-sigcse25. (If they’ve done so already, there is no need to fill out the form a second time.) Researchers listed as co-authors on three or more submissions must volunteer to review. (Undergraduate co-authors are exempt from this requirement.)
- Download an appropriate template, check the Instructions for Authors.
- Check the Here is a Sample Panel Submission with Notes that has some notes/tips that shows the required sections.
- Review Additional Format Instructions in Instructions for Authors to be sure you have included all required items.
- Review the additional resources.
- Review the instructions for reviewers and the Review Form to see what reviewers will be looking for in your paper.
- Look at the list of topics in the Info menu on this site or on EasyChair and pick 3-7 appropriate topics for your submission.
- Look at the EasyChair submission page to make sure you’ll be prepared to fill everything out. Note that you are permitted to update your submission until the deadline, so it is fine to put draft information there as you get ready.
The submission on EasyChair
Note: EasyChair does not let you save incomplete submission forms. Please fill out all of the fields in one sitting and save them. After that, you can continue to update the information in the fields and your submission until the deadline.
- Use an appropriate template.
- Ensure that your submission is accessible. See accessibility tips for authors for further details.
- Ensure that your submission does not exceed the page limit.
- Ensure that your submission contains author names and affiliations for the single anonymous review process.
- Submit the final version by 11:59 p.m. AOE, Sunday July 21st 2024.
- IMPORTANT: as you enter the author names in EasyChair consider the order. Author lists can NOT be modified (this includes add/remove/reorder)
Post-Acceptance and Presentation Information
What Gets Published?
The 2-page panel proposal for each accepted submission will be published in the SIGCSE TS 2025 proceedings.
Presentation Details
All named panelists for accepted panels must register for and attend the SIGCSE TS 2025 in person. Some Panels will be selected for live streaming.
Further details about post-acceptance processes and presentation logistics will be provided by the time acceptance decisions are sent out.
Resources
Sample panel proposals can be found here:
Language Editing Assistance
ACM has partnered with International Science Editing (ISE) to provide language editing services to ACM authors. ISE offers a comprehensive range of services for authors including standard and premium English language editing, as well as illustration and translation services. Editing services are at author expense and do not guarantee publication of a manuscript.
Instructions for Reviewers
Review Timeline
Reviewing Phase | Start Date | End Date |
---|---|---|
Reviewing | Monday, 5 August 2024 | Wednesday, 21 August 2024 |
Discussion & Recommendations | Thursday, 22 August 2024 | Thursday, 29 August 2024 |
Table of Contents
- Overview
- Submission and Review System
- Single-Anonymous Review Process
- Panel Review Process
- Getting Started Reviewing
- Panel Review Guidlelines
- Discussion
- Recalcitrant Reviewers
Overview
Panel sessions provide an opportunity for expert panel members to present their views on a specific topic and then to discuss these views among themselves and with the audience. Usually a panel session starts with a brief introduction of the panel topic and the participants, followed by short presentations by the panelists giving their views. They are scheduled in standard conference spaces. The session must allow sufficient opportunity (about 30 minutes) for an interactive question and answer period involving both the panelists and the audience.
A typical panel will consist of four participants, including the moderator. Limiting a panel to four participants allows sufficient time for audience questions. Proposals with more than four panelists must convincingly show that all panelists will have time to speak, and the audience will have time to respond, within the session time.
Criteria used in reviewing the proposals include the likely level of interest in the topic, the presence of panel members with multiple perspectives on the topic, and the likelihood that the panel will leave sufficient time for audience participation.
If the proposal is accepted, all presenters listed in the panel description will be required to register for the conference and to participate in the session.
Submission and Review System
The review process for SIGCSE TS 2025 will be done using the EasyChair submission system (https://easychair.org/my/conference?conf=sigcsets2025). Reviewers will be invited to join/login into EasyChair, update their profile, and select 3-5 topics that they are most qualified to review. To do so, reviewers select SIGCSE TS 2025 > Conference > My topics from the menu and select at most 5 topics. More topics make it harder for the EasyChair system to make a good set of matches. Reviewers also identify their Conflicts of Interest by selecting SIGCSE TS 2025 > Conference > My Conflicts.
Single-Anonymous Review Process
Submissions to the Panels track are reviewed with the single-anonymous review process. Submissions should include author names and affiliations. Thus, the author identities are known to reviewers, but reviewers are anonymous to each other and to the authors. The reviewing process includes a discussion phase after initial reviews have been posted. During this time, the reviewers can examine all reviews and privately discuss the strengths and weaknesses of the proposed slate anonymously through EasyChair. Information from the discussion be used by the track chairs in making final acceptance decisions.
The SIGCSE TS 2025 review process does not have a rebuttal period for authors to respond to comments, and all acceptance decisions are final.
Panel Review Process
SIGCSE TS 2025 is continuing a review process for Panels, Special Sessions, and Tutorials begun for the 2024 Symposium. Reviewers will be asked to review approximately six proposals. Initial reviews will consist of a single rating (Recommend acceptance, Unsure, Do not recommend acceptance) and a short rationale for that rating. After the initial reviews, the track chairs will propose a slate to accept. In putting together the slate, the chairs will consider ratings, comments (and appropriateness thereof), and the balance of topics. Reviewers will then discuss both the slate of reviews and the complete set of submissions, proposing substitutions as appropriate. Track chairs will then make the determination of the final slate and will write meta-reviews for the authors, based on the initial comments and the discussion.
We expect that the broader discussion of the slate will provide a more equitable and transparent review process and that the replacement of individual reviews with meta-reviews will better address issues of potential bias in individual reviews.
Getting Started Reviewing
Before starting your review, you may be asked by the Track Chairs to declare conflicts with any submitting authors. Please do so in a timely manner so we can avoid conflicts during assignment.
After the submission deadline and before reviewing can begin, Reviewers will bid on submissions they are interested in reviewing. Please bid for submissions where the title and abstract are in your area of expertise. Bidding will help with assigning submissions for review that you’re qualified and interested in reviewing! If you do not bid within the allotted time window, we will use topics to assign submissions for review.
As a Reviewer, we ask that you carefully read each submission assigned to you and write a constructive review that concisely summarizes what you believe the submission to be about. When reviewing a submission, consider:
- the strengths and weaknesses,
- the contribution to an outstanding SIGCSE TS 2025 program and experience for attendees, and
- how it brings new ideas or extends current ideas through replication to the field and to practitioners and researchers of computing education.
Panel Review Guidelines
Reviewers provide high-quality reviews for submissions to provide authors with feedback so they may improve their work for presentation or future submissions. While authors will not receive your comments directly, the Track Chairs are likely to use your comments from the rationale in providing advice to the authors. As such, please ensure that all criticism is phrased in a constructive manner.
In the initial phase of the review, you will be asked three questions.
Recommendation. Please enter your preliminary recommendation for this submission. After we gather the preliminary recommendations, we will propose a slate of proposals to accept and then ask reviewers to discuss that slate.
Rationale. Please give your rationale for your recommendation. Authors will NOT see your complete rationale. However, track chairs may use text from your rationale in providing feedback to authors.
Confidential remarks for the program committee. If you wish to add any remarks intended only for PC members please write them below. These remarks will only be seen by the PC members having access to reviews for this submission. They will not be sent to the authors. This field is optional.
We strongly recommend that you prepare your rationale in a separate document; EasyChair has been known to time out.
Please consider the issues below as you write your review.
- Relevance and Interest
- Is the panel topic clearly stated?
- Are the benefits to the SIGCSE audience clearly indicated?
- Is the panel topic of interest to the SIGCSE community?
- Structure & Plan for Audience Participation
- Is there an overview of the panel structure?
- Does the proposed structure include time for a brief introduction of the topic and the panelists?
- Does the proposed structure include time for panelists to present their views?
- Does the proposed structure allow sufficient time (at least 30 mins) for an interactive question and answer period between the audience and panelists?
- Could the panel still be effective if given a shorter session?
- Do the panelists have a viable plan for a hybrid format?
- Panelist considerations
- Does the proposal clearly identify the panelists (i.e., name and affiliation) and describe their expertise related to the topic?
- Will the panel be well positioned to present multiple views on the topic, representing the diversity of perspectives within the SIGCSE community? Note: Please refer to “ACM’s definitions of diversity and inclusion”. Please also refer to “ACM’s recommended considerations when forming diverse teams” (or diverse panels in this case).
- Does the proposal clearly identify no more than four panelists, including the moderator? Otherwise, are each of the panelists needed for representing a full range of perspectives on the panel topic?
While your review text should clearly support your scores and recommendation, please do not include your preference for acceptance or rejection of a submission in the feedback to the authors. Instead, use the provided radio buttons to make a recommendation (the authors will not see this) based on your summary review and provide any details that refer to your recommendation directly in the confidential comments to the APC or track chairs.
Discussion
The discussion and recommendation period provides the opportunity for the Track Chairs to discuss reviews and feedback so they can provide the best recommendation for acceptance or rejection to the Program Chairs. During this phase, a proposed slate of Panels will be discussed. The Track Chairs will make a final recommendation to the Program Chairs from your feedback. The Track Chairs will also prepare feedback for the authors based on your review and the discussion.
Recalcitrant Reviewers
Reviewers who don’t submit reviews, have reviews with limited constructive feedback, do not engage effectively in the discussion phase or submit inappropriate reviews will be removed from the reviewer list (as per SIGCSE policy). Recalcitrant reviewers will be informed of their removal from the reviewer list. Reviewers with repeated offenses (two within a three year period) will be removed from SIGCSE reviewing for three years.
Review Form
The review process for round-one single-anonymous submissions (Panels, Special Sessions, and Tutorials) is described in Instructions for Reviewers. The questions on the pre-discussion form follow. They may change slightly before the review period.
Recommendation: Please enter your preliminary recommendation for this submission. After we gather the preliminary recommendations, we will propose a slate of proposals to accept and then ask reviewers to discuss that slate.
- Recommended for inclusion in the slate of Panels at TS 2025
- May be appropriate for inclusion in the slate of Panels at TS 2025
- Not recommended for inclusion in the slate of Panels at TS 2025
Rationale: Please give your rationale for your recommendation. Authors will NOT see your complete rationale. However, track chairs may use text from your rationale in providing feedback to authors.
Confidential remarks for the program committee: If you wish to add any remarks intended only for PC members please write them below. These remarks will only be seen by the PC members having access to reviews for this submission. They will not be sent to the authors. This field is optional.