Just in! Some data on the number of submissions for the contributed paper and panel sessions (plus workshops and preconferences) for ACRL’s National Conference in Philadelphia in 2011. As you might expect – the number of submissions (mostly) continues to increase.
Here’s the data:
Contributed Papers
Number of submissions – 238
Number that can be accepted – 66
Acceptance rate 28%
Panel Sessions
Number of submissions – 202
Number that can be accepted – 44
Acceptance rate 22%
Preconferences
Number of submissions – 11
Number that can be accepted – 6
Acceptance rate 55%
Workshops
Number of submissions – 50
Number that can be accepted – 12
Acceptance rate 24%
Comparative Numbers for ACRL 2009
Contributed Papers – 230 submissions; 44 accepted; 19% acceptance rate
Panel Sessions – 169 submissions; 35 accepted; 21% acceptance rate
Preconferences – 15 submissions; 6 accepted; 40% acceptance rate
Workshops – 47 submissions; 11 accepted; 23% acceptance rate
ACRL has responded to a major request from the membership – provide more academic librarians with an opportunity to present at national conference. ACRL is making this possible by increasing the number of papers from 44 to 66 so that will increase the acceptance rate nearly 10 points (thanks to a stable number of submissions) over 2009. The trade-off is that each paper presentation is just 20 minutes, so there are now three papers, not two, at every session. Even with 9 additional panel sessions, owing to a substantial increase in the number of submissions, the acceptance rate is pretty much the same. Looks like those who submitted a preconference proposal will have the best shot at acceptance. But overall more of you will be presenting at ACRL!
Good luck to all those who submitted a proposal. I hope you came up with a snappy title (see more on that here).
And in the event your proposal is rejected, keep in mind that the submission deadline for poster sessions, cyber zed shed, roundtables and virtual conference sessions is November 1, 2010. So there will still be plenty of time to submit a proposal. There are a bunch of other innovations being planned for the conference – and you’ve probably now found out who the keynoters are – so I hope you’ll be planning to come to Philadelphia in 2011.