MISC 2010London, 20-22 January 2010, the first edition of the international event for the growing community of professionals interested in, and working with, personal data management and digital identity.
The MISC conference is about exploring the current changes in technologies and practices towards individualisation and socialisation through connectivity and mobile technology in a perspective of lifelong learning. Our goal is to bring together researchers and practitioners working in a variety of fields (education, employment, healthcare, policy, technologies etc.) to facilitate exchanges and foster future collaborations. It aims at offering a forum where these researchers and practitioners can discuss theoretical as well as practical aspects, open issues, and innovative approaches and share the latest advances in the state of the art in personal learning.The conference is organised in 9 tracks: 1. Personal vs. community learning spacesThe objective of this track is to explore how individual learners can use technology to construct and manage a lifelong personal learning space. Also, study how personal learning spaces interact with other personal learning spaces to create community and organisational learning landscapes.
2. Employability vs. employment managementThe objective of this track is to explore the link between individual systems used to manage one's employability (e.g. through continuing professional development) and organisational systems designed to plan and manage competency development of large cohorts of staff.
3. Individual vs. organisational learning and knowledge managementThe objective of this track is to explore the link between individual and organisational learning processes and the information systems that support both processes.
4. User generated contents vs user generated contextsLearners start to be recognised as knowledge producers rather than mere knowledge consumers; learner generated contents is used as learning material by other earners. Beyond generating contents, learners are also starting to take into their own hands the management of learning infrastructures in schools, universities, as well as in communities of practice.
5. Individual vs. collective recognition of competenciesThe objective of this track is to explore the tools and methods for recognition of individual competencies in relation to the collective recognition, formal and informal, of the competencies of a group or an organisation.
6. Individual vs. collective identity constructionThe objective of this track is to explore how technology contribute to the construction of individual and collective identities.
7. Personal Health Records vs Medical recordsThe objective of this track is to explore the impact of personal health records on healthcare systems and professional practice. How do personal health records and medical records differ?
8. Vendor Relationship Management Systems vs Customer Relationship Management SystemThe objective of this track is to explore the emergence of vendor relationship management systems, their benefits for individuals and organisations and the impact on the way business is done.
9. Person vs organisation centric architecturesThe objective of this track is to explore how to make the Internet a more person-centric environment — the Internet of Subject.
10. Mobile devices and social networksThe objective of this track is to explore the interaction between the growing individualisation of technologies with the development of social computing and social networks
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