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PRELIMINARY PROGRAM
9:00 Opening
Session 1: Collaborative Discourse
  9:15   paper - Using a Model
of Collaborative Dialogue to Teach Procedural Tasks
                       
Jeff Rickel, Neal Lesh, Charles Rich, Candace L. Sidner, and Abigail Gertner
  9:40   paper - AMANDA - An
Intelligent Dialog Coordination Environment
                       
Marco A. Eleuterio, Jean-Paul Barthès, Flávio Bortolozzi,
and  Celso A. Kaestner
10:05   discussion
10:30   break
 
Session 2: Making Pedagogical Decisions
10:50   paper - The Design and Formative
Analysis of a Dialog-Based Tutor
                       
Neil T. Heffernan and Kenneth R. Koedinger
11:15   paper - A Decision-Theoretic
Architecture for Selecting Tutorial Discourse Actions
                       
R. Charles Murray, Kurt VanLehn, and Jack Mostow
11:40   demo - AutoTutor: An Intelligent
Tutor and Conversational Tutoring Scaffold
                       
Arthur C. Graesser, Xiangen Hu, Suresh Susarla, Derek Harter, Natalie Person,
                       
Max Louwerse, Brent Olde, and the Tutoring Research Group
12:00   discussion
12:30 lunch
 
Session 3: NL Generation and Understanding
 2:00   paper - Simple Natural
Language Generation and Intelligent Tutoring Systems
                      
Barbara Di Eugenio, Michael Glass, Michael J. Trolio, and Susan Haller
 2:25   paper - Pedagogical Content
Knowledge in a Tutorial Dialogue System to Support Self-Explanation
                      
Vincent Aleven, Octav Popescu, and Kenneth R. Koedinger
 2:50   short paper - Introducing
RMT: A dialog-based tutor for research methods
                      
Peter Wiemer-Hastings and Kalloipe-Irini Malatesta
 3:10   discussion
 3:30   break
 
Session 4: Architectural Trade-Offs in Tutorial Dialogue Systems
 3:50   Panel Discussion
           Panelists:
                             
Vincent Aleven, Carnegie Mellon University
                             
Reva Freedman, Northern Illinois University
                             
Art Graesser, University of Memphis
                             
Neil Heffernan, Carnegie Mellon University
                             
Carolyn Penstein-Rose, University of Pittsburgh
                             
Claus Zinn, University of Edinburgh
Issues:
1. What are better/more efficient/less labor-intensive ways of evaluating tutorial dialogue systems?2. What are the advantages and disadvantages of using a production rule / model-tracing approach to dialogue management as compared to a planning approach or a finite state automaton approach?
3. How can we make tutorial dialogue systems easier to build?
 5:10   Closing remarks
 
 6:30 dinner in San Antonio with the workshop participants