Call for WWW2013 Tutorials
Half and full day tutorials from leading specialists form a core part of the WWW program, valuable to researchers and developers seeking to pick up new skills or the latest developments in an area. WWW 2013 intends to offer conference attendees and local participants a rich diversity of high quality tutorials reflecting current topics and trends in Web design, technologies, techniques, standards and sciences. As tutorials are educational events they should provide a comprehensive introduction to the state-of-the-art in the tutorial’s topic. Proposed tutorials can address the interests of a varied audience: beginners, developers, designers, researchers, practitioners, users, lecturers and representatives of governments and funding agencies who wish to learn new technologies.
We encourage submissions of tutorial proposals on all topics in the general areas of WWW 2013 and tutorials bridging these areas, or introducing new perspectives in these areas. Tutorials may provide an introduction to new Web technologies and trends, describing the application of the Web in specific domains or present techniques from other fields that are of relevance for the Web. Tutorials may be theoretical; however, we encourage organizers to incorporate hands-on sessions and concrete examples when possible.
Submission Guidelines:
Tutorial proposal submissions should contain the following sections in the suggested order. Copy this list into your proposal document before editing it:
| Title | A concise title |
|---|---|
| Presenters | The names, affiliation, contact information, and brief bio of the presenter(s) |
| Duration and Sessions | Proposed duration of the tutorial (3 or 6 hours), different sessions if applicable, together with justification that a high-quality presentation will be achieved within the chosen time period. |
| Topic and Description | A detailed description of the tutorial topic, providing a sense of both the scope of the tutorial and depth within the scope |
| Audience | A description of the intended audience and the expected learning outcomes. |
| Prerequisite | Desired prerequisite knowledge of the audience. |
| Relevance | A statement addressing why the tutorial is important and timely? How is it likely to complement the conference program? |
| Previous Editions | If the tutorial was presented previously, when and where was it given and how will it be modified for WWW 2013? If possible, provide a link to slides from the previous tutorial presentation. |
| Equipment | Indicate any additional equipment needed (if any). The standard equipment includes an LCD projector, a single projection screen and microphones. |
Submission:
Proposals must be in PDF and be no longer than 4 pages, single column, and 12-point font. Proposals should be submitted using
https://www.easychair.org/conferences/?conf=tutorialswww2013
Inquiries should be sent to: tutorials@www2013.org
Tutorial presentations will be published electronically and made available to WWW participants.
Important dates:
Proposal submission deadline:
January 7 2013
Acceptance notification:
February 4 2013
Tutorial dates:
May 13-14 2013
Presenter benefit: A WWW2013 Passport Registration – if there are multiple presenters, they must decide which will receive the complimentary registration
Tutorial Co-Chairs:
Maria Luiza Machado Campos – Federal University of Rio de Janeiro
Bebo White – SLAC/Stanford University
W3C Tutorial Chair:
Marie-Claire Forgues – W3C Sophia-Antipolis, France

















