Mentoring
Every year CHI submissions from people unfamiliar with the HCI community are turned down because authors do not understand how to communicate their work effectively to this community. We do not want to miss these interesting viewpoints. If you have not previously had a submission accepted to CHI and are unsure how to write a good CHI submission, you may ask for a mentor. A mentor is a person who will help focus your submission to the CHI audience through one-on-one advising. A mentor will also familiarize you with the high standards and strict deadlines of the CHI submission process. Mentors are volunteers familiar with successful submissions in each participation
category.
Mentors are available for tutorials, papers, short talks, development consortium, interactive posters, and student posters. You may request a mentor by going to the online mentoring request form. If you cannot access the online form, send email to chi2001-mentors@acm.org and you will receive a request form.
If you want to ask for a mentor, we must hear from you no later than 26 May 2000 for tutorials,
9 June 2000 for organization overviews and papers, and 29 September 2000 for short talks, interactive posters and student posters. We recommend that you request a mentor even earlier; a mentor's feedback will be most useful to you if it can influence the way you focus your work, not just the way you write it up for the conference.
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