Science

#COVID-19 forced us to move a conference from a Greek island to the web, and quickly. Here’s what we learned

#COVID-19 forced us to move a conference from a Greek island to the web, and quickly. Here’s what we learned

                                    by Charlene Zietsma, Andreas Pekarek, Elke Schuessler, Markus Helfen and Rick Delbridge,                                                                                 The Conversation
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<div data-src="https://scx2.b-cdn.net/gfx/news/2020/covid19force.jpg" data-sub-html="Conference convenors and a member of the tech support team. Author provided" data-thumb="https://scx1.b-cdn.net/csz/news/tmb/2020/covid19force.jpg">
    <figure><img alt="COVID-19 forced us to move a conference from a Greek island to the web — and quickly. Here's what we learnt" height="480" src="https://scx1.b-cdn.net/csz/news/800/2020/covid19force.jpg" title="Conference convenors and a member of the tech support team. Author provided" width="800"></img><figcaption>
            Conference convenors and a member of the tech support team. Author provided
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In May this year, we were convening a dream conference: 140 like-minded academics on a Greek island for three-and-a-half days to work on a topic we cared about—organizing sustainably.

We recognized the contradiction of traveling to Crete to discuss sustainable organizing. But it was a long tradition of the Organization Studies Summer Workshop—an annual workshop of organization scholars—to be there. This year’s workshop focused on how businesses and other organizations could be reconfigured to operate in more ecologically-friendly and socially just ways.

So, we tried instead to make the conference itself sustainable by using a sustainable venue, serving only vegetarian meals, avoiding plastics and air conditioning, and encouraging carbon offsetting.

Then the universe threw us a curveball in the form of COVID-19, which made us rethink sustainable organizing. Despite a complete lack of experience, and no funding, we decided to move online. More than 100 participants, across 14 time zones, decided to experiment with us.

We grappled with a few decisions. How to deal with time zones? How to deal with tech issues? How to ensure the conference was not only intellectually fulfilling, but also contributed to the social interactions that deepened discussions, fostered collaborations, and that had always made the summer workshop so special?

And how to organize this in only a few weeks?

So here’s what we did.

Group discussions and Zoom rooms

We decided to shrink the conference into two-and-a-half days, spreading most sessions across the hours that worked for most participants’ time zones. But we also ensured there were at least some sessions for those outside the main time corridor.

We asked authors to post a 10-15 minute video of their presentation on YouTube a week before the conference, which people could watch in their own time.

Then we hosted 50-minute Zoom sessions of around 18-25 participants. Each presented comments on three papers (four to five minutes per paper, without using slides to avoid tech issues). The papers’ authors briefly responded, which led to an open discussion in the group.

In the first few sessions, session chairs often had to prompt discussions. But the interactions became quite lively.

We left the rooms open after the 50 minutes and the informal conversations that make workshops so rich often continued.

We also included two keynote sessions. One was a plenary session for all (100 ) conference participants, which included breakout discussions. And there were three social sessions, in which participants were randomly assigned to breakout rooms so they could enjoy conversations in small groups (two to five people), or join larger group conversations.

Digital benefits

While we missed the post-work drinks by the pool in Greece, we were pleasantly surprised to find the virtual conference had a number of benefits.

No travel not only reduced environmental impacts, but also the work-life impact, enabling some people to participate who otherwise may not have been able to, because of the time required.

Some participants told us that, for budgetary or family reasons, they were only able to attend the conference because it was virtual.

While conference fees will be needed in the future to offset organizational costs, virtual conferences will still be far less expensive than face-to-face, enabling broader participation.

The random assignment of people to breakout rooms for social hours ensured conversations among people who may not otherwise have interacted. It increased camaraderie during the virtual conference, leading to stimulating discussions.

The chat function during talks allowed participants to share resources and insights sparked by the talks immediately, which then could trigger additional insights among others. For example, the idea to start a Utopia Platform to share blogs, teaching and research resources was hatched on the chat during a keynote. We have since launched this platform.

The feedback from participants was extremely positive, though expectations were probably low.

We imagine a greater variety of conferencing formats going forward, including more regular but shorter virtual meetings, alternate years of physical meetings and mixed models with some virtual sessions and some remote participants.

Our COVID-19 induced experience showed us virtual conferencing is both practical and desirable as a means of organizing sustainably and ensuring more democratic participation.



This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.The Conversation

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                                        <strong>Citation</strong>:
                                             COVID-19 forced us to move a conference from a Greek island to the web, and quickly. Here's what we learned (2020, July  8)
                                             retrieved  8 July 2020
                                             from https://phys.org/news/2020-07-covid-conference-greek-island-web.html


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