I applied and was accepted to participate in the Programing Languages Mentoring Workshop [0] at the International Conference on Functional Programming [1] and the main conference in general, my first conference.<p>As a sophomore in college, I don't feel that I'm prepared to get the most out of attending and my advisor—to no fault of his own, he's interested in Computer-Human Interface and CS education—was not much help.<p>Since there is no one way to "do" a conference—especially during COVID-19—how do you participate in conferences?<p>Sidenote: I'm also interested in working on and presenting research to which I'm looking at participating in a REU [2] or one of the two research opportunities my university offers [3,4]. Due to the unnerving end of my freshman year, this summer was a wash.<p>[0]: https://icfp20.sigplan.org/home/PLMW-icfp-2020?track=PLMW%20%40%20ICFP%20<p>[1]: https://icfp20.sigplan.org/<p>[2]: https://www.nsf.gov/crssprgm/reu/index.jsp<p>[3]: https://www.elon.edu/u/academics/undergraduate-research/surf/<p>[4]: https://www.elon.edu/u/academics/undergraduate-research/summer-programs/sure/
I organized a major ACM CS conference this year. Some thoughts .. you need to be super proactive. A super keen person would read the specific papers from before and ask insightful questions during Q/A. State your name and affiliation. Hear other people asking great questions and engage in discussions with them. If there is a conference networking app or coffee break session, make an effort to participate. In networking, best thing is to be interesting (technically) .. have some of your own original ideas/opinions or projects to discuss. Good luck!