Tutorials - Evaluation and Assessment in Software Engineering
The tutorials provide an opportunity to take a deeper dive into a specific topic related to the empirical software engineering. Proposals are invited for tutorial of 1.5 to 3 hours long. Proposals must provide:
- An abstract (what is the tutorial about?)
- A set of expected learning outcomes (what will attendees learn upon completion?)
- Intended audience and prior knowledge (who is it for and what are the attendees expected to know before attending this session?)
- An overview of the structure and topics (e.g., what activities and what specific topics will be covered?)
- Presenters Bio (a short bio to demonstrate background knowledge and relevance of the given topic to the presenter)
- Please use submit proposals via EasyChair: (https://easychair.org/my/conference?conf=ease2020) and choose the Tutorials options form the submission menu.
Tutorials:
Title: "Analyzing Software Engineering Experiments: Everything You Always Wanted to Know but Were Afraid to Ask"
Presenter: Dr. Sira Vega, Universidad Politécnica de Madrid Madrid, Spain
Overview: This tutorial aims to help those working with empirical studies avoid common pitfalls when analyzing the results of software engineering experiments. The tutorial reviews key issues identified from published software engineering experiments, and addresses them based on the knowledge acquired after 20 years running experiments.
Title: "Systematic Reviews and Maps in Software Engineering: A Tutorial"
Presenters: Kai Petersen and Jefferson Seide Molléri
Overview: This tutorial will provide training on (a) how to plan and conduct SLRs / SMs, and (b) how to critically assess existing SLRs / SMs.
Timezone: AoE (UTC-12h)
- Proposal submission: ongoing till January 17, 2019
- Notification: ongoing, with acceptance decisions announced and the end of each month.
- Final notification date: 3 February
Track Co-Chairs
Ruzanna Chitchyan, University of Bristol, UK
Torgeir Dingsøyr, University of Science and Technology, Norway