Micro-conference

A micro-conference is a small scale conference that allows researchers to present and discuss their work. They provide a channel for the exchange of nascent ideas and an opportunity for academic collaboration.

Overview

Micro-conferences draw upon a collaborative ‘workshop’ tradition of research [1] and occupy the space between a seminar and an academic conference. Like seminars they bring together small groups to focus on a particular subject and encourage active participation. However, like academic conferences they are usually composed of various research-led presentations and focus upon the informal dissemination of ideas rather than academic instruction. They are short and concise, with participants offering a brief overview or raising research-led questions. These are usually submitted as a short abstract and reviewed before the presentation is accepted.

gollark: I'm not sure why you would decide to be made of antimatter. That would be silly.
gollark: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CP_violation
gollark: I assume you have particle accelerators.
gollark: Well, the obvious approach is to use the weird asymmetric things in particle physics which I recall existing.
gollark: You could transmit an image, obviously, but there's no guarantee you'll write it down the same way round.

See also

References

  1. Barbara Taylor, ‘History Workshop Journal’, Making History http://www.history.ac.uk/makinghistory/resources/articles/HWJ.html.
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