Hints for Organizing a Successful Doctoral Symposium
An Experience Report
Claudia Raibulet
1
and Eila Ovaska
2
1
Dipartimento di Informatica, Sistemistica e Comunicazione, University of Milano-Bicocca, Viale Sarca, 336, Milan, Italy
2
VTT Technical Research Centre, Kaitovayla, 1, Oulu, Finland
Keywords: Doctoral Symposium, Phd Students, Software Engineering.
Abstract: This paper describes our joint experience in organizing a Doctoral Symposium co-located with one of the
main software engineering conferences. It presents the issues we addressed during the organization of the
symposium, as well as during the symposium. This paper is addressed (1) to the organizers of Doctoral
Symposiums aiming to provide a recipe with the main ingredients and preparation steps and their related
significance in the entire organization process, as well as (2) to the PhD students providing our feedback on
the expectations, evaluation, and presentation of their contributions.
1 INTRODUCTION
PhD students in software engineering represent the
pool of researchers who aim to follow an academic
carrier (and, thus, teach students how to do software
engineering) or to join an industrial reality (and,
thus, follow the engineering of large and complex
software) (Almi, 2011); (Subrahmanyam, 2009);
(Villavicencio, 2012); (XueYun, 2010). In this
perspective, PhD students should be able to make a
research plan of high quality and to follow its
implementation from all the points of view
(technical and organizational/managerial).
Moreover, they should be able to properly interact
with all the stakeholders of their research work (e.g.,
in this particular context, experts in the research
domain who are not the requesters/contractors of the
project and do not know any detail or history of the
project, but who may "buy" the idea and/or the
solution).
The Doctoral Symposiums organized in the
context of the main conferences give the PhD
students the possibility to present their research
projects (and research results) and to have a valuable
feedback from experts in the software engineering
domain. A presentation in the context of a Doctoral
Symposium should be seen as a preview of a PhD
dissertation.
This paper presents the experience of the co-
chairs of a Doctoral Symposium co-located in the
context of one of the most important software
engineering conferences: European Conference on
Software Architectures (ECSA, 2013).
1.1 Why This Paper?
The motivation beyond this paper is twofold.
The first concerns the organization of the
Doctoral Symposium. The co-chairs have experience
in organizing such types of events (e.g., conferences,
workshops, doctoral symposiums). Concerning the
Doctoral Symposiums, we have gathered quite
different experiences in organizing different
symposiums, differences coming from the research
area and from the co-located conferences. Hence, in
this paper we aim to summarize the hints and the
lessons learned from the organization of such events
by providing as an example our experience in
organizing this Doctoral Symposium (Ovaska,
2010).
The second concerns our feedback through this
paper to the PhD students. In our opinion it is very
useful for them to know the rules of the game in
order to prepare and present a meaningful research
plan, convince the reviewers and the attendees of the
significance of their work, justify the results and
value of the proposed work, and make a
capturing/interesting presentation in front of the
software domain experts. This will help students
also in their future academic or industrial carriers.
89
Raibulet C. and Ovaska E..
Hints for Organizing a Successful Doctoral Symposium - An Experience Report.
DOI: 10.5220/0004762800890094
In Proceedings of the 6th International Conference on Computer Supported Education (CSEDU-2014), pages 89-94
ISBN: 978-989-758-021-5
Copyright
c
2014 SCITEPRESS (Science and Technology Publications, Lda.)
1.2 Which Are the Lessons Learned?
Concerning the organization work, the co-chairs
have learned that there is little material (except the
Web sites of the conferences and workshops) on the
organization rules of Doctoral Symposiums in
general, and on the evaluation criteria in particular.
Concerning the feedback for the PhD students,
the co-chairs have to outline that PhD students are
often confused and have difficulties to present a
research agenda for three-four years. Especially,
describing the expected results and their validation
seems particularly difficult for students. However,
they are rather familiar with presenting workshop
and conference papers which have a different
objective. They also have difficulties to interact with
domain experts (potential stakeholders) due to
various reasons.
This paper summarizes the experience of
organizing a Doctoral Symposium from the co-
chairs point of view. The paper addresses aspects
concerning both organization aspects and lessons to
be learnt by the PhD students.
The rest of the paper is organized as follows.
Section 2 presents the main steps of organizing a
Doctoral Symposium, as well as the motivation
behind these steps. Section 3 describes an actual
example by focusing on the evaluation of the
contributions. The lessons to be learnt are listed in
Section 4. Conclusions are dealt with in Section 5.
2 ORGANIZATIONAL HINTS
This section lists the meaningful aspects the co-
chairs have to address during the organization of the
Doctoral Symposium.
2.1 Call for Contributions
The call for contributions should indicate the macro
research topics of the Doctoral Symposium. Usually,
they are the same or a sub-set of the topics of the
main conference which the symposium is co-located
with. This aspect is important because it is closely
related to the expertise of the program committee
members. Typically, part of the main conference
program committee members also serve as the
evaluators of PhD students research plans and are
available and committed to face discussions with
PhD students.
The call for contributions should mention the
minimum and maximum length of the expected
papers. The length may be imposed by the editors of
the proceedings if the papers are accepted to be
published in the conference proceedings or in a co-
related publication. If no constraints are imposed,
the contributions should be long enough to present
the main aspects of the students' work, and in the
same time as short as possible in order to avoid the
insertion of details.
The call for contributions should clearly state
what main aspects are to be addressed in the
contribution and further used in the evaluation
process. It is fair that the students know in advance
the rules of the game. Based on their experience and
after making a survey on the call for contributions
for Doctoral Symposiums co-located in main
software engineering conferences (e.g., ICSE (ICSE,
2013), FSE (FSE, 2013), ASE (ASE, 2013),
ASWEC (ASWEC, 2013), APSEC (APSEC, 2013),
WICSA (WICSA, 2013)) the co-chairs consider as
significant the following ones:
the problem to be solved, its location and
importance in the research field; this shows the
ability of the PhD students to focus on a
problem, to locate it in the research field and to
evaluate the possible impact if the results are
achieved;
previous work, which has addressed similar
problems explaining why they have not been
previously solved; this shows the ability of the
PhD students to understand the research field and
to avoid already known problems and mistakes;
the proposed approach; this shows the ability of
the PhD students to find appropriate solutions to
problems and to make a medium-long term plan
for achieving the identified solutions;
the expected results; this shows the ability of the
students to identify the impact and the value of
their work, as well as the expected results after
investing a significant effort to solve a non-
trivial problem;
a plan for the evaluation of the results; this
shows the ability of the PhD students to sustain
and demonstrate concretely the obtained results;
this request is usually consciously or
unconsciously avoided by the students, hence it
has been decided to explicitly introduce it in the
call for contributions.
Another significant aspect mentioned in the call for
contribution is the stage of the PhD work. This
influences the evaluation process (see Section 2.3).
2.2 Program Committee
The program committee should fulfil at least three
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different criteria:
members should be known experts in the field;
the committee should be balanced and include
members from academia and industry;
members (or at least part of them) should be
present during the workshop to discuss directly
with the students; this is not easily achievable
also because of the parallel events (e.g., sessions,
workshops) usually organized during
conferences, and hence experts may be involved
in various events contemporaneously.
2.3 Evaluation Criteria
Based on the current stage of the PhD work, the five
main points listed in the call for contributions are
translated into the following evaluation criteria:
problem addressed and its link to the Doctoral
Symposium topics;
motivation of the problem as an open research
issue;
importance of the problem in the research field;
identification of the main related works;
a proposed research plan with milestones for
evaluation;
appropriateness of the research plan for the
problem;
expected results;
evaluation plan of the expected results;
appropriateness of the evaluation plan for the
results.
Furthermore, the clearness and the presentation
quality are added to this list of evaluation criteria.
These evaluation criteria should be made
available to the reviewers to achieve a homogeneous
evaluation and as objective as possible results.
The co-chairs decided to not accept contributions
which are in a very early stage (less than 6 months)
because it is difficult for the students to present
properly the last three points listed in the evaluation
criteria. In early stage, students may start to know
the previous work and try to identify a real problem
and formulate it in a meaningful way. However, it is
typical that they are not able to define a research
plan, identify the possible results and/or make their
evaluation plans. Furthermore, the co-chairs decided
to not accept contributions which are in the
advanced stage (less than 6 months to their finish)
because the symposium date is usually a couple of
months after the submission of the contributions and
the feedback provided by the program committee
members may hardly influence the thesis even if
problems or open issues are identified.
The program committee members' feedback and
the impact of the feedback on the students work are
different in an early stage and in an advanced stage.
In an early stage, the feedback may influence
significantly the students' work starting from the
definition of the problem until the evaluation plan of
the results. In an advanced stage, the feedback may
still influence the proposed approach and may focus
on the results and their evaluation plan.
2.4 Letter of Recommendation
The role of the letter of recommendation is to
confirm that the submitter is currently a PhD
student. In addition, it should indicate the current
stage of the PhD student's work and provide a
qualitative and brief evaluation of the work done
until the submission of the contribution.
2.5 Presentations and Feedback
The students' presentations during the PhD
workshop should be perceived by the students as a
short version of their final dissertation presentation.
For example, a solution may be to allocate 45' to
each student, 25' minutes for the presentation and 20
minutes for discussion. The discussion should
consider both positive and negative aspects of the
presented work in a constructive way.
2.6 Extended Abstract for the Doctoral
Symposium
The co-chairs have to prepare an extended abstract
about the Doctoral Symposium, abstract which is
included in the conference proceedings. The
extended abstract summarizes the call for
contributions, introduces and thanks the members of
the program committee for their collaboration, and
provides an overview of the accepted papers
(because the Doctoral Symposium papers are not
always included in the main conference
proceedings) (Ovaska, 2010).
3 AN ACTUAL EXAMPLE
In the case of this Doctoral Symposium, the received
contributions were eleven, among which seven have
been accepted for the presentation during the
Doctoral Symposium. Three of accepted papers got
an "accept" decision, while four of them a "weak
accept" one.
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The strong points of the "accepted" papers can be
summarized as follows:
(1) real open problems identified,
(2) clear presentation of the problem and of the plan
to address it,
(3) meaningful case study presentations,
(4) proper identification of the expected results,
(5) sustainable evaluation plan of the results.
However, also for the accepted papers improvement
aspects have been suggested:
(1) extend the evaluation plan to further case studies
or application domains (because some of them
seemed narrow-scoped),
(2) discuss the impact of the results both from
theoretical and practical points of view,
(3) delimit better the contribution of the PhD work if
it is developed in the context of a research
group/project which involves many researchers.
The strong points of the "weak accepted" papers can
be summarized as follows:
(1) meaningful research question identified,
(2) potentially good solution plan introduced,
(3) acceptable expected results,
(4) promising evaluation of the expected results.
The limitations of the "weak accepted" papers
concern:
(1) the unclearness of the overall presentation,
(2) poorly or very briefly addressed some of the
required points explicitly indicated in the call for
contributions,
(3) missing details for the comprehension of the
overall approach,
(4) English-language presentation problems (which
may contribute to the low quality related to the
first three mentioned problems),
(5) format presentation problems (e.g., the requested
format has not been adopted and hence, the
length of the contribution is less or longer than
the requested one).
The main reasons why four of the papers have been
rejected are the following. One paper was not
focused on the conference topics (e.g., the main
stream of this software engineering conference
research topics) and hence, on the topics of the co-
located Doctoral Symposium. The second rejected
paper was in a very early stage and the evaluation
criteria were not met. In spite of the fact that the
problem addressed and the idea behind the solution
were very challenging, the paper was rejected. The
third rejected paper did not describe clearly the
addressed problem, the proposed approach, and the
expected results. Its presentation quality was also
quite poor. The fourth rejected paper was a
particular case because it was a short version of the
paper submitted and accepted to be presented during
the main conference. In addition, it did not address
all the requirements specified in the call for
contributions, being thought from the beginning for
the main conference.
The qualitative evaluation (considering as
values: excellent, good, fair, and poor) of the
contributions is shown in Figure 1.
Figure 1: Example of evaluation results concerning the actual example.
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4 LESSONS LEARNED
This section summarizes the main lessons the
organizers and the PhD students should learn from
and for a Doctoral Symposium.
4.1 Lessons to Be Learned by the PhD
Students: Preparation of
Contributions
PhD students interested in presenting their work in
the context of a Doctoral Symposium should first
understand the following hints:
1. Read carefully the call for contributions. First,
meet the topics and then try to address all the
requirements.
2. A Doctoral Symposium paper is not just another
paper. PhD students should be really motivated
and interested to receive a valuable feedback
from experts to improve their three-four years
work. It should describe a research plan/agenda,
which may address one or more challenging
research problems connected among them and
which should be developed through three-four
years. It is true, three-four years may seem a very
long period especially in the IT world, and this
may lead to changes in the agenda. However, the
PhD students should be able to provide and
sustain their research agenda also in a changing
research environment.
3. The PhD research may be co-located within one
or more research projects. An important
observation should be made here: the projects
should not be confused with the research
plan/agenda of a PhD student. Students should
clearly state their own agenda and the link with
the co-related projects. In addition, a PhD
student should clearly delimit his/her own
contribution from the other members of the
research group.
4. Do not try to invent problems. Try to find a real
one, also considering the interaction with the
industrial partners and lessons learned in industry
settings.
5. The page limit may be a problem. Try to be
concise, and in the same time precise.
4.2 Lessons to Be Learned by the PhD
Students: Presentations and
Feedback
The PhD students who have their work accepted to
be presented at a Doctoral Symposium should
consider the following hints:
1. Each presentation should indicate the potential
application domains of the results of the research
work and describe how the results will be
validated in a case study or a set of case studies.
Even if in the paper there is no space for such
information, the presentation should include
application domains and case studies.
2. PhD students should listen carefully to the
questions and the comments made by the
audience (program committee members and
other experts) and only after the interlocutor has
finished the question/feedback try to answer and
provide further details. PhD students tend to
answer immediately showing that they have
quickly understood the intention of the
interlocutor and that they have already thought
about the raised problem. Students should admit
that the audience may know more on a particular
topic than themselves, even if there are persons
in the audience who do not publish papers in this
domain, but work in this domain.
3. PhD students should consider their interlocutors
as friends, not enemies, which try to help them
by even making uncomfortable questions and
comments. Furthermore, they should establish
closer contacts with (at least part of) the program
committee members.
4. PhD students should also listen carefully to the
other PhD students' presentations and ask
questions about their work because they can
learn about the more advanced PhD students’
work and avoid repeating the similar problems in
their own work. Furthermore, the presenters will
be their future colleagues.
4.3 Lessons to Be Learned by the
Doctoral Symposium Co-chairs
The organizers of a Doctoral Symposium should
consider the following aspects:
1. Insert a request in the call for contributions
which asks for a gantt concerning the main
milestones for the proposed plan/agenda. Or,
require the presentation of the gantt during the
Doctoral Symposium.
2. The letter of recommendation has currently a
formal role, indicating the submitter is currently
a PhD student and that the research field is the
one described in the paper. In addition, it
specifies the year of the PhD research. This letter
should have a more important role. It should
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provide an overview of the student research and
organizational abilities and a qualitative
evaluation of the current status of the PhD
student’s work. It should also state the
collaborators in this work (e.g., MsC students
making their final thesis on topics concerning the
research plan, as well as senior researchers in
case the PhD work is co-located with an
European or National project).
3. Require a list the accepted and submitted
publications concerning the PhD research plan.
4. Provide a template for presenting the PhD
research plans and clearly stipulate that it should
be strictly followed.
5. Encourage PhD students’ participation by
allocating them one of the papers for evaluation.
In this way, a PhD student can practice his/her
competence on making analysis and representing
the evaluation results in a critical, but polite
manner and discuss about them with the program
committee and workshop members.
5. Be always two or more co-chairs especially if the
organizational period (e.g., review process) may
include holidays and one of the co-chairs may
not be available for several days.
5 CONCLUSIONS
PhD students are the talent of the future who shall
solve the emerging challenges in increased complex
situations in innovative ways. Thus, it is extremely
important that they can get all the support for
making their journey towards the core of their
research community as fruitful and easy as possible.
The primary intend of this paper is to support PhD
students in making top-class research and to provide
the guidelines for the chairs of Doctoral
Symposiums to organize successful events.
Indirectly, this kind of guidance can influence the
quality and effectiveness of research, which in turn
will have a positive impact on IT based innovation
and business as well.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
We would like to thank the conference organizers
for giving us the opportunity to chair this event, and
the program committee members for their valuable
collaboration.
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