[Air-L] CFP for Special Issue of Connexions (Education and Training for Globally Dist. Virtual Teams)
Pam Brewer
brewerpe at appstate.edu
Thu Jun 13 06:18:32 PDT 2013
Dear Colleagues--
Kirk St.Amant and I would like to invite you to submit proposals for a
special issue of the the journal /connexions/. This special issue is
titled Education and Training for Globally Distributed Virtual Teams:
Preparing the Workforce of the Future. I am copying the text of the
call below. Please let us know if you have any questions.
Best regards,
Pam
connexions
Call for Papers
EDUCATION AND TRAINING FOR
GLOBALLY DISTRIBUTED VIRTUAL TEAMS
Preparing the workforce of the future
Special Issue
Guest editors
*Pam Estes Brewer *
/Mercer University /(email: brewerpse at gmail.com)
*Kirk St.Amant *
/East Carolina University /(email: stamantk at ecu.edu)
Today, information and communication technologies (ICTs) allow
individuals located in different nations to collaborate almost as easily
as if they were located in the same physical office. As a result,
*/globally distributed virtual teams /*now support the work of
organizations across the spectrum of products and services. Such teams
are used by a range of for-profit and non-profit organizations including
businesses, government organizations, the military, and educational
institutions. These organizations are increasingly employing individuals
located in different nations to engage in various types of
collaborative work via ICTs.
As a result of such factors, much of the */modern workforce /*is now
migrating toward a virtual model of work, and forces associated with
globalization are changing the nature of competitiveness in the new
economy. */Individuals/*, in turn, must often adapt rapidly to virtual
environments and do so with little or no formal preparation in the types
of professional communication practices essential to success in such
contexts. As a result, individuals working in internationally
distributed teams must generally learn from their mistakes, an effective
but often costly approach. Moreover, individuals must also often adapt
to working in an environment in which they are regularly paired with new
colleagues and clients from different nations, cultures, and language
groups.
Thus, the modern distributed workplace requires employees to account for
and address three central factors---*/technology, culture, and
language/*---in order to succeed in most work-related tasks.
An all-important question arising from this situation is, */"How can we
better prepare these individuals for this international, online context?" /*
A 2012 /IEEE Transactions on Professional Communication /special issue
on global training reveals, however, that very little information on
training---particularly global virtual communication training---has been
published in the major professional communication journals in the last
ten years. Such a gap needs to be closed if educators and trainers alike
wish to prepare adult learners to be successful participants in current
(and future) business practices and processes.
This special issue on education and training for globally distributed
virtual teams seeks to address this topic through */articles on how best
to prepare individuals to succeed in this new workplace/*.
In particular, the editors are interested in articles that answer
questions such as:
. What types of education and training are most desired by managers and
participants of global virtual teams?
. How can organizations best prepare virtual team members for working
across boundaries of language? What issues affect translation and
terminology? What do team members most need to know about World
Englishes, English as a Second Language, or English for Specific Purposes?
. How can organizations better prepare employees to collaborate and
cooperate online and across cultural boundaries?
. How can social media be used to prepare individuals for working in
intercultural online contexts?
. What legal issues can affect or should be included in global virtual
team training? What should participants in global virtual teams know
about proprietary information and privacy?
In addition, the editors of this special issue welcome articles such as:
. Critical analyses of the many published task/technology models that
support global virtual teams.
. Critical analyses of virtual team studies in areas such as technical
training, adult education, human resources development, educational
technology, human performance technology, technical communication, and
user experience design.
The guest editors are also interested in discussing other prospective
topics with potential contributors.
Types of articles
/connexions /publishes four types of articles:
. Original research articles of 5,000 to 7,000 words in length
. Review articles of 3,000 to 5,000 words in length
. Focused commentary and industry perspectives articles of 500 to 3,000
words in length
. Teaching cases of 3,000 to 5,000 words in length
Submission Guidelines
Interested individuals should send a 150-200 word proposal to
connexionsspecialissue at gmail.com
Proposals should be sent as a .docx, .doc, or .rtf file attached to an
email message with the subject line:
"Proposal for Special Issue on Globally Distributed Virtual Teams."
All proposals should include the submitter's name, affiliation, and
email address as well as a working title for the proposed article.
Production Schedule
The schedule for the special issue is as follows:
. 15 Jan. 2014 --Proposals due
. 15 Feb. 2014 -- Decisions on proposals sent to proposal submitters
. 15 June 2014 -- Manuscripts due
. 15 Aug. 2014 -- Reviewer comments to authors
. 15 Oct. 2014 -- Final manuscripts due to editors
. Dec. 2014 -- Publication of special issue
Contact Information
Completed proposals or questions about either proposal topics or this
special issue should be sent to Pam Estes Brewer and Kirk St.Amant at
connexionsspecialissue at gmail.com <mailto:connexionsspecialissue at gmail.com>
connexions . international professional communication journal (ISSN
2325-6044)
--
Pam Estes Brewer, Ph.D.
Assistant Professor
Director of Undergraduate Studies, English
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
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