Call for Papers -- Submission deadline: June 9, 2006
FORMAL METHODS IN THE TEACHING LAB
Examples, Cases, Assignments and Projects Enhancing Formal
Methods Education
http://www.di.uminho.pt/FME-SoE/FMEd06/
A Workshop at the Formal Methods 2006 Symposium
Workshop: Saturday, August 26, 2006
Symposium: August 21 - 27, 2006
McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada
I. ORGANIZATION
This workshop is organized by the Formal Methods Europe Subgroup on Education.
Dines Bj?rner (JAIST, Japan)
Eerke Boiten (University of Kent, UK)
Raymond Boute (Universiteit Gent, Belgium)
Andrew Butterfield (Trinity College, Dublin)
John Fitzgerald (University of Newcastle upon Tyne, UK)
Randolph Johnson
Steve King (University of York, UK)
Peter Lucas
Michael Mac an Airchinnigh (Trinity College, Dublin)
Dino Mandrioli (Politecnico di Milano, Italy)
Andrew Martin (Oxford University, UK)
Jos? Oliveira (Universidade do Minho, Portugal) -- Convenor
Kees Pronk (Technische Universiteit Delft, NL)
Sim?o Melo de Sousa (Universidade da Beira Interior, Portugal)
Wolfgang Reisig (Humboldt-Universit?t zu Berlin, Germany)
Workshop Co-Chairs
Raymond Boute
Formal Methods Group, Department of Information Technology (INTEC),
Ghent University, Ghent (Belgium)
E-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Jos? Oliveira
Departamento de Informatica
Universidade do Minho, Braga, Portugal
E-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
II. CONCEPT OF THE WORKSHOP
Motivation
Quoting Dines Dines Bj?rner:
"Formal Methods Education is currently facing a `trichotomy':
- On the one hand, industries dealing with the design of complex
and critical systems have an increasing need for methods that
provide a certain degree of confidence in the result, and are
often looking for external assistance in the area of formal methods
from consulting companies and academia.
- On the other hand, a growing number of university staff enjoys
the intellectual challenge of research in this area and teaching
formal techniques to students.
- On the "third hand", an increasing number of students de-select
formal methods in the curriculum, due to various causes and trends."
One cause of the problem is a general mathphobic trend in society and education.
Another cause is that, intellectually, Information Technology is the
victim of
its own success. Indeed, the rapid growth creates so many design and
implementation
tasks that can be done and, more importantly, are being done with negligible
educational
or scientific background that it is difficult to argue convincingly in favor of
formal
methods on the basis of immediate everyday necessities. Critical systems, of
course,
are a notable exception.
These trends are so pervasive that the small minority of FM educators has
little
hope to curb them in the near future. More effective in the long term is
instilling
a higher degree of professionalism in the next generation. This requires in
particular
a directed, positive action towards motivating students.
Theme
This workshop solicits short papers, presentations, demonstrations and
evaluations
describing sharp classroom or lab experiments which have proved particularly
beneficial
to the students' understanding and motivation for formal methods.
The emphasis is not on (new) theories or methods but on specific
illustrations
and exercises that can be used by colleagues in their own courses, perhaps
applying
their own formalisms.
The main goals are:
- to share knowledge and experience on the practicalities of teaching and
learning formal methods;
- to build a collection of interesting cases, examples, assignments and
projects
that FM teachers can use in educational activities.
Format
The workshop will be a forum-like event, with short presentations, demos and
informal
discussion slots. After the workshop, if the evaluation committee decides that
there
is a sufficient number of high-quality submissions, an agreement will be sought
with
Springer Lecture Notes in Computer Science about publishing a special volume,
and authors
will be invited to submit their contribution for refereeing.
III. SUBMISSIONS
Call for Contributions
This workshop solicits papers, presentations, demonstrations and evaluations
describing
such material in detail and how it has been beneficial to the students'
understanding
and motivation.
The emphasis should not be primarily on new theories or methods but on
specific
illustrations and exercises that can be used by colleagues in their own
courses, perhaps
applying their own formalisms.
The central problem(s) should be clearly stated and a typical solution
outline
provided (using the author's preferred method), accompanied by a discussion of
what
educational aspect is meant to be enhanced. Contributors should motivate their
techniques
with a discussion of the desired knowledge and skill outcomes of the
examples/case
studies or projects, and a frank appraisal of their effectiveness, insofar as
such
an appraisal is meaningful and instructive, which we expect to be the case for
most
topics.
Papers should be kept short (maximum 6 pages). They should be prepared
preferably
in LaTeX, and a pdf-file should be sent to [EMAIL PROTECTED] Submitted papers
will
be evaluated by the Subgroup on Education.
Timings
Submission deadline: Friday, June 9, 2006
Acceptance notification: Friday, July 1, 2006
IV. REPOSITORY AND FOLLOW-UP
The organization will produce a web-based resource of output from the workshop
housed
under http://www.fmeurope.org. Contributors willing to allow their teaching
materials
to be made publicly available for the community are invited to send source
files, links
or tools and other information that would be suitable for such an on-line
repository,
which the organization will keep alive on a wiki-like basis.
The collected material will form the start of a compendium of examples,
cases,
assignments and projects, according to the following (rough) categorization.
Examples are shorter items, ranging in length from a single observation to over
a full
page. An example is aimed at clarifying a single aspect where the essence is
captured
in a somewhat condensed form, with minimal clutter from side-issues.
Cases are taken from situations encountered in practice, where the problems
may
appear in various forms: from immediately appealing (and hence motivating) but
not
very challenging to subtly hidden and requiring major research. Side-issues and
secondary
problems may be included to clarify the setting or to illustrate the need for
abstraction.
Assignments and projects correspond to examples and cases respectively, but
the
difference is that they are elaborated by the students rather than the
instructors.
The repository is expected to evolve in at least 3 dimensions: new items are
added
in their original form as time proceeds; existing items are reworked in various
formalisms;
experience in teaching is reported.
Every one or two years, people who submit the most suitable contributions
will be
invited to join forces for combining their work into a "laboratory notebook".
Any further suggestions are welcome.
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