| Proposal Instructions |
Instructions for Making Proposals for SDHS Annual ConferencesTo submit a proposal (after reading the following guidelines) please use the proposal submission form at http://sdhs.scripts.mit.edu/proposals/proposal_submission_form.html. The program committee for SDHS annual conferences welcomes proposals for scholarly papers, panels, lecture-demonstrations, workshops, working groups, roundtables, and alternate formats. All presenters must be members of SDHS. Individual Papers must be based on unpublished research or interpretation and must be designed for oral delivery within twenty minutes, including use of audiovisual aids. (Papers running eight double-spaced pages are ideal.) Three individual papers are grouped on each panel, with a moderator. If you are interested in presenting an individual paper, please submit a proposal of no more than 250 words that describes your focus and approach, with a bibliography of sources no longer than one page. On the submission form clearly indicate your audio/visual and equipment needs. Panels: Three or four applicants may propose a panel of papers on a related topic. We also welcome panels that take a delivery-response format, in which formal respondents comment on one or two presenters’ work. If you are interested in proposing a panel, please submit individual paper proposals as outlined above, making sure in addition that each proposal also includes a 250-word summary of the larger panel topic, and that the title of the proposed panel and the panelists’ names are included in the appropriate fields of the submission form. Lecture-Demonstrations may run from 45 to 90 minutes. If you are interested in presenting a lecture-demonstration, please submit a proposal of no more than 250 words that describes the topic, approach, and sources. On the submission form clearly indicate your requirements for space, for time, and for audio-visual and/or electronic equipment. If two or more applicants are involved, each must fill out a submission form. Workshops: Movement workshops may not exceed 90 minutes. If you are interested in offering a workshop, please submit a proposal of no more than 250 words that describes your focus, approach, and sources. On the submission form clearly indicate the type of space required and the recommended attire for participants. Roundtables: One applicant may propose a roundtable discussion on a particular topic. If you are interested in this option, please submit a proposal of no more than 250 words that outlines the topic and identifies participants. Each participant must fill out a submission form, and these forms should be sent together with the roundtable proposal. All proposed participants must fill out a submission form. Ongoing Working Groups: At each SDHS conference, ongoing working groups meet around the topics of: Students in SDHS, Dance History Teachers, Early Dance, Ethnicity and Dance, Strategies for Doctoral Education, Practice-as-Research, and Reconstruction. Ongoing working groups may propose topics or circulate readings to SDHS membership ahead of the conference meeting, at the discretion of the working group conveners. Proposals for new working groups are welcome and should outline, in 500 words or less, the focus for the group, and attach the proposal to the submission form. Alternate Formats: SDHS also welcomes submissions of collaborative presentations and other formats that enable the active participation of conference participants. These might include Ad-Hoc Working Groups, where applicants propose a one-time working group that brings participants together to discuss materials (scholarly papers, published books, dance practices or productions) read and/or viewed prior to the conference. If you are interested in this or another alternative format, please submit a proposal of no more than 250 words that outlines the topic and plan, and identifies an organizer and participants. Each participant must fill out a submission form, and these forms should be sent together with the proposal. SDHS GUIDELINES:
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