[Air-L] CFP for Special Training Issue of the Journal of Rhetoric, Professional Communication and Globalization
Pam Brewer
brewerpe at appstate.edu
Tue Sep 7 12:29:25 PDT 2010
Dear Colleagues--
Please forgive cross-postings. We cordially remind you to consider
submitting proposals for researched papers or best practices pieces in a
special issue of JPCG entitled "Navigating the Global Training Terrain:
New Literacies, Competencies, and Practices." This issue, to be
published in fall 2011, will focus on training in global contexts from
the perspective of both those who train and those who learn. We seek
submissions from a variety of perspectives including business, science,
humanitarian practice, health, social advocacy, education, and government.
Proposals can be up to 500 words and should be submitted on or before
October 10, 2010. We have included specific dates in the publishing
cycle in the CFP copied below. Please feel free to share this CFP with
others who may be interested. We hope that this special issue will
represent academic and practitioner perspectives as well as multiple
disciplines. If you have any questions, please email me at
brewerpe at appstate.edu <mailto:brewerpe at appstate.edu>.
Best!
Pam
--
Pamela Estes Brewer
Assistant Professor
Director, Writing and Editing Internships
Department of English
Appalachian State University
Manager, STC Academic Special Interest Group
phone 828-262-2351
fax 828-262-2133
email brewerpe at appstate.edu <mailto:brewerpe at appstate.edu>
*Call for Papers: Special Issue*
*Navigating the Global Training Terrain: New Literacies, Competencies,
and Practices
*(to be published in September/the Fall of 2011)
The twenty-first century has been characterized by rapid
transformation—technological, social, cultural, environmental, economic,
and scientific. In this changing milieu, organizations and individuals
must continually acquire new knowledge and abilities or be left behind.
Influential entities such as the United Nations strongly advocate the
pursuit of lifelong learning for individuals, while leading companies,
government agencies, and non-governmental organizations seek to become
what scholars such as Peter Senge have called “learning organizations”
that can transform themselves through the learning of their members at
all levels.
Training, or the structured development of skills, competencies, and
up-to-date knowledge, is an increasingly important element in these
pursuits. The shape of training may vary—formal or informal,
face-to-face or technologically mediated, short-term or long-term—but
the end purpose is always the same: to facilitate learning by
individuals or groups, usually with the larger purpose of enhancing
organizational quality.
Training is vital to the success of globally connected organizations and
individuals, but success requires the trainers’ effective bridging of
linguistic, cultural, and social distances. Only teams and individuals
with facility in navigating diverse languages, cultures, technologies,
educational practices, and rhetorical traditions will be able to
successfully provide training to global audiences.
Professional communicators, whose discipline claims expertise in several
areas relevant to training—including oral, written, and visual rhetoric,
usability, information architecture, electronic collaboration,
intercultural communication, and collaboration with translators—are well
positioned to contribute to global training efforts or take on the role
of trainers themselves. Yet, despite these advantages, the pool of
research on training in global audiences is limited, especially within
the field of professional communication.
This special issue of the /Journal of Rhetoric, Professional
Communication, and Globalization/ seeks to address this need by
providing a space for scholarly research and best practices on the topic
of global, organizational training. The issue, entitled *Navigating the
Global Training Terrain: New Literacies, Competencies, and Practices
*will focus on training in global contexts from the perspective of both
those who train and those who learn, including current research and best
practices. The special issue will also cast an eye toward organizational
training as it is evolving towards the future.
The editors of the special issue welcome submissions from a variety of
perspectives including business, science, humanitarian practice, health,
social advocacy, education, and government.
Possible topics pertaining to the theory, teaching, and practice of
training in global contexts include the following, among others:
· Intercultural considerations in the design and delivery of training
· Training and the social web
· Cultural intelligence for trainers and training audiences
· Language use and translation in training contexts
· Meta-communication and training
· Communities of practice
· Legal issues in global training
· Economic aspects of global training
· Assessment of global training
· Training from a distance
Proposals (up to 500 words) for research papers, short best practices
pieces*, and tutorials are due by October 10^th , 2010. Review criteria
can be found on the Journal’s website at *www.rpcg.org*. Proposals
should be sent as an email attachment to one of the guest editors of the
special issue:
Pam Brewer, Appalachian State University: *brewerpe at appstate.edu*
Jim Melton, Central Michigan University: *james.melton at cmich.edu*
Joo-Seng Tan, Nanyang Technological University: *ajstan at ntu.edu.sg*
* We strongly encourage practitioners to submit best practices pieces on
any of the topics identified in this CFP or on related topics. Best
practices describe the training strategies, approaches, or methods that
work in a particular situation or environment. What has worked and why?
What has not worked so well, and what could work better? Authors may use
the following optional framework for best practices pieces: title,
description, methods used, results, technologies used, and lessons
learned. While the proposal and review process is the same for research
papers, tutorials, and best practices pieces, final manuscripts for best
practices should be shorter: approximately 1000 to 3000 words in length.
*Production Schedule
*The schedule for the special issue is as follows:
10 October 2010 -- 500-word proposals due
15 October 2010 – Guest editors return proposal decisions to submitters
10 January 2011 – Draft manuscripts of accepted proposals due
1 July 2011 -- Final manuscripts due
September 2011 -- Publication date of special issue
*About the Journal
*The /Journal of Rhetoric, Professional Communication and Globalization/
publishes articles on the theory, practice, and teaching of technical
and professional communication in critical global and intercultural
contexts such as business, manufacturing, environment, information
technology, and others. As a global initiative, the Journal welcomes
manuscripts with diverse approaches and contexts of research, but
manuscripts are to be submitted in English and grounded in relevant
theory and appropriate research methods. The Journal is peer reviewed
with an editorial board consisting of experienced researchers and
practitioners from over 20 countries. **
The Journal is free or “open access,” using PKP open source software and
housed at East Carolina University. The first edition is planned for
September 2010, and it will be published thereafter on a quarterly
basis. For more information, see *www.rpcg.org.*
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