Janice, a question: Wasn't the Canadian Roundtable in Chicago a different event than the Canadian Caucus? Roundtables appear to fall under the constraining rule while causcuses don't. The reason I'm anxious about this is that I'll be submitting a panel for Atlanta with two Purdue graduate students and wouldn't want to sabotage them by having my ineligibility eliminate the whole panel. Graham On Thu, 9 Apr 1998, Janice Freeman wrote: > I've had a few queries about the C's multiple submissions rule. I've cut > and pasted it into this message for you all to read. It seems to me to > say that the papers given in a caucus session don't count under the > multiple submissions rule. This would mean that Guy could give his > workshop, Graham his panel, and they could both still participate in our > caucus roundtable. > > BTW, I'm still drawing a blank when it comes to catchy titles. I know > the intent was to be as inclusive as possible (so we could include high > school and college presenters), and "Comp 101" is very > university-sounding. So help, please..... > > Janice Freeman, > Centre for Academic Writing > University of Winnipeg > > BTW, if someone could send me the addresses of other Canadian lists > (CATTW, TESL, CSSR), it might save some reposting. > > http://www.ncte.org/cccc/99/format.htm > > No Multiple Submissions > > To ensure maximum participation and a fair process for reviewing > proposals, the Executive Committee of CCCC has adopted a new policy: no > multiple submissions. This policy is based on the Executive Committee's > commitment to include as many presenters as possible in the convention > program. > > Under the new policy, a person may be proposed for one—and only > one—speaking role (i.e., Forums,Roundtables, three-speaker Panels, and > Classroom Samplers). The proposer of a session is responsible for > certifying that speakers listed on the proposal are not being proposed > for any other speaking role. Participation in Workshops and Special > Interest Groups and Caucuses does not count as a speaking role. >