KONVENS Teaching for NLP Workshop
News: *Submission open*Workshop Date & Venue
 * September 18, 12pm - 6pm + Workshop Dinner * TH Ingolstadt * Co-located with 
KONVENS 2023 * Submission Deadline: June 9, 2023 * Notification: July 5, 2023 * 
Camera Ready Deadline: July 15, 2023Contact
konvens-teach4...@googlegroups.com
Workshop website: https://gscl.org/en/events/teach4nlp2023Aim of the Workshop
The fast-paced nature of progress in NLP poses unique challenges to educators 
engaging in curriculum design for NLP courses and NLP-related degree programs. 
Its rapid growth has led to the creation and revision of thousands of courses 
and degree programs at universities and online, as well as new educational 
materials focused on emerging subareas of NLP (e.g., prompting, ethics in NLP 
systems). For the Workshop on Teaching NLP we propose to bring the NLP 
community together at KONVENS 2023 to discuss the following topics:
 * What are key elements of NLP and/or CL curricula? * What adaptations are 
necessary to cater to different groups (i.e. core computer science students vs. 
core CL students vs. Digital Humanities students) * What topics should be 
covered for students studying NLP/CL as major subject, which topics should be 
covered for students studying NLP/CL as minor subjects? * What is unique about 
teaching NLP/CL in German speaking contexts? * What challenges do we face when 
working with German or other non-English languages as a language, data sets, 
etc.? * What are key differences between regular universities and universities 
of applied sciences?
We invite submissions relating to teaching CL/NLP in applied linguistics, 
digital humanities, computational linguistics, data science, or computer 
science.Call for Contributions
One of our major goals is to provide resources for teachers and instructors 
that can last beyond the discussions held on the day of the workshop. We invite 
2-3 page short papers or 6-8 page long papers (with unlimited pages of 
references) that can be position papers on teaching methodology and theory or 
teaching materials (lecture slides, exercises, project descriptions) with 2-3 
page short papers describing the materials.
 * Tools and methodologies (e.g. teaching with code, active learning, flipped 
classroom) * Adapting existing curriculum to incorporate new NLP advancements * 
Choice of topics to cover for different target audiences * Developing courses 
for (IT) students without linguistics background * Developing courses for 
students who have non-computer science backgrounds * Teaching NLP in German 
speaking context (or using other languages than English in general) * Position 
of NLP in curricula at universities of applied sciences * Ethics, 
reproducibility, and responsible practices
Existing resources for teaching NLP are often scattered across course and 
faculty web pages or they are outdated, such as the ACL Wiki’s page on 
Teaching. We plan to join forces with the ACL-wide Teaching NLP workshop to add 
resources to their repository in order to make our material more generally 
available.
Submission will be single-blind (i.e., they should not be anonymous) and follow 
the ACL style guidelines.
Submission must be electronic via the KONVENS CMT System. Select the Teach4NLP 
Workshop track during submission. After submitting your paper, you can submit 
attachments in a second step.Organizers
 * Margot Mieskes is a Professor for Information Science at the University of 
Applied Sciences, Darmstadt. She has studied computational linguistics in 
Stuttgart, Edinburgh, and Cambridge, and did her PhD in Heidelberg. * Jannik 
Strötgen is a faculty member of FH Karlsruhe. He holds a PhD from the 
University of Heidelberg. * Christian Wartena holds a PhD from the University 
of Potsdam. He worked for several companies in Germany and the Netherlands on 
machine translation, morphological analysis, keyword extraction and recommender 
systems. Since 2011 he is professor for knowledge and language processing at 
the University of applied sciences and arts in Hannover, where he teaches 
courses on natural language processing, text mining, information retrieval and 
semantic web in the Information Management program. He also regularly teaches 
NLP courses at the University of Hildesheim. * Annemarie Friedrich is a 
Professor for Natural Language Understanding at the Faculty of Applied Computer 
Science at the University of Augsburg, and the Vice President of the GSCL. She 
holds a PhD in Computational Linguistics from Saarland University and is highly 
interested in activation concepts in university teaching. * Stefan Grünewald is 
a PhD student working at Stuttgart University and the Bosch Center for 
Artificial Intelligence. He is a member of the Enabling team at Bosch, teaching 
machine learning to Bosch employees with a wide range of job roles. His 
research interests include syntax (specifically syntactic dependencies) and 
neural architectures for structured prediction in NLP. Furthermore, his 
responsibilities within Bosch involve teaching NLP and ML concepts to 
non-experts.Program Committee
 * Margot Mieskes * Jannik Strötgen * Christian Wartena * Annemarie Friedrich * 
Stefan Grünewald * Torsten Zesch * Barbara Plank * Cerstin Mahlow * Ines 
Rehbein * Alessandra Zarcone * Heike Adel * Nils Reiter * Anette Frank * Heike 
Adel * Jakob Prange * Ulrike Padó
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