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Program
(Updated
18 October, note program change for
Saturday 10:30 and Saturday 16:00).
Click here
for a printable pdf version. Links to
downloads of the slides for the presentations
will be posted as they become available.
| Friday,
4 November 2005 |
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|
| 14.00 |
Registration
opens |
Friday's
topics at a glance
15.30-16.45
- Parallel sessions: Practical
text management/New trends
17.00-18.20 - Parallel sessions:
Teaching writing skills/Practical
text management
18.40-19.20 - Inaugural
address
19.20-20.40 - Keynote speech:
Joy Burrough-Boenisch
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|
| 14.30-15.30 |
Coffee
get-together
After an early lunch, come to meet
other participants over coffee and
dessert before the sessions start
at 15.30. |
|
Parallel
sessions |
| |
Room
1 |
|
Room
2 |
| 15.30-16.45 |
When
translators edit—issues
in potentially conflicting roles
Karen
Shashok, freelance
translator and author’s
editor, Granada, Spain
Abstract |
Insights
from translation studies: what’s
new in localisation theory and
practice
Anthony Pym,
Universitat Rovira i Virgili,
Tarragona, Spain
Abstract
Cover-to-cover
bilingual publication of scientific
journals—new challenges
for translators and editors
Mary Ellen Kerans,
freelance author’s editor
and translator, Barcelona, Spain
Abstract |
|
| 16.45-17.00 |
Break |
|
Parallel
sessions |
| |
Room
1 |
|
Room
2 |
| 17.00-18.20 |
Improving
referencing skills: considerations
for the facilitation of academic
writing
Iain Patten,
freelance translator and author’s
editor, Valencia, Spain
Abstract
Improving
biomedical research communication
through an introductory course
on journals and critical reading
Valerie Matarese,
UpTo.it, Pieve di Soligo, TV,
Italy
Abstract
|
Editing
translation: pitfalls in style,
grammar and usage
Ann King,
freelance translator and software
trainer; Jane Lewis,
freelance translator and interpreter,
both of Barcelona, Spain
Abstract
Negotiating
the final text: ideas for guaranteeing
the quality of current and future
translations and corrections
Malcolm Hayes,
International Communications and
Technical Services, Lleida, Spain
Abstract |
|
| 18.20-18.40 |
Break |
|
| 18.40-19.20 |
Inauguration
Welcome:
reflections on the conference
theme:
Interdisciplinary
Collaboration—International
Communication
Ricard Guerrero,
University of Barcelona, University
of Massachusetts-Amherst; and
Editor-in-Chief, International
Microbiology, Barcelona,
Spain
Angel Cardama,
Universitat Politècnica
de Catalunya, Barcelona, Spain
|
|
| 19.20-20.40 |
Keynote
speech
The
sense of editors’ associations:
a case report on SENSE, an editors’
group in the Netherlands
Joy Burrough-Boenisch,
PhD, Wageningen, Netherlands
Abstract
Dr.
Burrough-Boenisch is a founding
member of SENSE (the Society of
English-Native-Speaking Editors
in the Netherlands) a model self-help
association for language professionals.
She is a practicing author’s
editor whose work on the authoring,
reading, and editing of scientific
articles has appeared in English
for Specific Purposes, Journal
of Second Language Writing,
Written Communication
and European Science Editor.
|
|
| 20.40-22.00 |
Welcome
reception
Please stay for informal conversation
with participants and presenters—over
Spanish wines and a light Spanish
supper of tapas. |
| |
|
| Saturday,
5 November 2005 |
| |
|
| 8.30-9.00 |
Registration |
Saturday's
topics at a glance
9.00-10.15
- Panel discussion: Reflections
on interdisciplinary practice
10.30-11.45 - Parallel sessions:
Editing for the non-native
English writer/Client needs
11.50-12.50 - Panel discussion:
Client needs
13.00-14.15 - Keynote speech:
Ana Marušić
16.00-17.15 - Panel discussion:
Historical and social perspectives
17.30-18.45 - Panel discussion:
Reflections on skills and
development
18.45-19.45 - Panel and
open discussion: Presentation
of METM—the association
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|
|
| 9.00-10.15 |
Panel
discussion: Reflections
on interdisciplinary practice
Translation
and/as Dialog
Susan M.
DiGiacomo, organizer,
Universitat Rovira i Virgili,
Tarragona, Barcelona; with the
following panelists:
Panelists:
Josep Maria Comelles,
anthropologist and psychiatrist,
and Angel Martínez
Hernáez,
anthropologist, both of Universitat
Rovira i Virgili, Tarragona, Spain;
Oriol Pi-Sunyer,
Ph.D, anthropologist, University
of Massachusetts at Amherst, USA;
Maria del Mar Pérez Iribarne,
geneticist,and Antoni
Serrano, MD, psychiatrist,
both of Hospital Sant Joan de
Deu, Barcelona, Spain
Abstract
|
|
| 10.15-10.30 |
Break |
|
Parallel
sessions |
| |
Room
1 |
|
Room
2 |
| 10.30-11.45 |
Four
layers of manuscript editing at
the Croatian Medical Journal—practical
examples
Aleksandra Mišak,
language editor, Croatian Medical
Journal, Zagreb, Croatia
Abstract
Training
editors to be aware of how and
why they edit non-native English
Joy Burrough Boenisch,
author’s editor, Wageningen,
Netherlands
Abstract |
Panel
discussion: Reflections
on needs and skills in academic
translation in Spain
Approaches
to translation and editing at
university language services
Alan Lounds,
panel organizer, Servei de Llengües
i Terminologia, Universitat Politècnica
de Catalunya, Barcelona, Spain
Abstract |
|
| 11.50-12.50 |
Panel
discussion: Client needs
The
publisher’s point of view:
skills needed to support print
or web presentation
Panelists:
José Alonso and
Joan Juan, Elsevier/Ediciones
Doyma; Ann Graul,
Prous Science; Mercè
Piqueras, International
Microbiology—all of
Barcelona, Spain
Abstract |
|
| 12.50-13.00 |
Brief
break |
|
| 13.00-14.15 |
Keynote
speech
A
mentoring or educational role
for national medical journals
published in English
Ana Marušić,
Zagreb, Croatia
Abstract
Dr
Marušić is a former president
of the World Association of Medical
Editors (WAME)—a dynamic
virtual organization whose trajectory
is documented on their web page—and
presently a member of the editorial
board of Science Editor, the journal
of the Council of Science Editors.
As editor of the Croatian Medical
Journal, Dr. Marušić has been
instrumental in implementing an
approach to peer review that serves
to mentor young scientists, helping
to create a critical mass of researchers
in her region who publish successfully.
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|
| 14.30-16.00 |
Conference
lunch
We’ll take a short walk to
a nearby restaurant and return for
coffee at the conference venue.
|
|
Parallel
sessions |
| |
Room
1 |
|
Room
2 |
| 16.00-17.15 |
Issues
in the history of Mediterranean
science communication
Frances
Luttikhuizen,
editor and independent researcher,
Barcelona, Spain; Alain
Touwaide, Smithsonian
Institution, Washington, D.C.,
USA ; Mary Ellen Kerans;
freelance, Barcelona, Spain
Abstract
|
Medical
writing in the regulatory environment:
a brief overview
Ben Young,
Young Medical Communication, Madrid,
Spain
Abstract
Contrasting
discourse styles in Spanish and
English research article discussions:
Evidence for progressive and retrogressive
patterns
Ian
Williams, University
of Cantrabria, Santander, Spain
Abstract |
|
| 17.15-17.30 |
Break |
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| 17.30-18.45 |
Panel
discussion: Reflections on skills
and development
Interdisciplinary
transitions—making the shift
from subject expert, linguist
or educator to language facilitator
Catherine
Mark, organizer,
author’s editor, Departamento
de Inmunología y Oncología,
Centro Nacional de Biotecnología/CSIC,
Madrid, Spain
Panelists:
Simon Bartlett,
scientific communications officer,
Centro Nacional de Investigaciones
Cardiovasculares, Madrid; Iain
K. Patten and Mary
Ellen Kerans, freelance
author’s editors and translators,
Valencia and Barcelona, respectively;
Ben Young,
Young Medical Communications,
Madrid—all panelists from
Spain
Abstract |
|
| 18.45-19.45 |
Panel
and open discussion
Presentation
of METM, the association—closing
discussion and future plans
METM’s organizers: Mary
Ellen Kerans, Frances
Luttikhuizen, Carolyn
Newey, Karen
Shashok, Alan
Lounds, Catherine
Mark, Greg Morley (webmaster)
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|
| 21.00 |
Post-conference
supper, informal
(optional event)
Please plan to join us for an informal
supper at a convenient location—sign
up for this optional event on Friday
afternoon or Saturday morning during
a break. |
|
Optional
social program
Closing dinner:
Join us for a farewell supper on Saturday
night at a restaurant to be announced
on the first day of METM 05. The restaurant—on
the peninsula of Barceloneta if weather
permits—will be economical. Sign
up during a break on Friday afternoon
or Saturday morning. Or sign up early
by e-mail to Carolyn Newey: CNewey@santpau.es.
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