U N T College of Engineering
     

Resources for Invitees to
Southwest ICER Workshop
 


CONTACT

Missie Gray

College of Engineering
P.O. Box 310440
Denton, Texas 76203-0330
(940) 565-4300
ceng@unt.edu

Hotel Information:

Amanda Barksdale
940-565-3484

Conference:

Dean Oscar N. Garcia (ogarcia@unt.edu)
Associate Dean
Kathleen Swigger (kathy@cs.unt.edu)
“Boots” Cassel at Lillian.cassel@
villanova.edu


 

 



 

Southeast Region Workshop on

“Integrative Computing Education and Research (ICER): Preparing IT Graduates for 2010 and Beyond,”

Dallas, Texas October 27 to Friday, October 28.

American Eagle Center, Dallas Texas.

 


 

 

National Science Foundation

Computer and Information Science and Engineering Directorate (CISE)

CISE/CNS Education and Workforce Cluster

"Integrative Computing Education & Research (ICER):

Preparing IT Graduates for 2010 and Beyond"

Guidelines for Preparing ICER Workshop White Papers

 

Introduction

This information is meant to serve as a guideline for ICER Workshop participants when preparing their “White Papers” prior to the ICER meetings. 

In taking a ten-year view of computing education, CISE asks that ICER Workshop participants put aside traditional notions of curricula, academic institution organizational structures, and other similar constraints to change. Participants are asked to assume a viewpoint that reflects the field’s broadening-scope, the increasing size, complexity and multi-disciplinary nature of computing applications, preparation of graduates who will need to be competitive in a global workforce, the ubiquitous role of security in the practice of computing, and the increasingly integrative nature of the field.

It is important that ICER participants not dwell on trying to precisely define what “computing” means.  For the purposes of the workshop, consider computing as a continuum of disciplines that may include the following (as well as others that the group may identify):

 

 Elec. Eng.
 Comp.
Eng.
 Comp. Sci.
 Info. Sys.  Multi. Med.  HCI Appl. Domains    Users
 


With White Papers serving as catalysts, ICER Workshop discussions should articulate long-term, high impact, and potentially high-risk, strategies to catalyze the transformation of university computing education throughout the nation.

White Paper Guidelines

ICER Participants are asked to prepare a maximum of two pages that address the following issues as well as any that are not covered by the questions that authors deem as important. The White Papers will be shared among workshop attendees.

 

  1. Preparing undergraduates for computing careers: What are the biggest challenges that you face in your role (i.e., as an educator, employer, administrator, leader, other)?
  2. Transforming the educational experience: What might the community do to address the challenges you identified above?
  3. Models for transforming computing education: What might an ideal undergraduate model for computing education look like in five years?
  4. Inhibitors and strategies: Can you identify inhibitors that might prevent the nation from achieving goals it sets for computing education? Can you identify strategies that may enable the transformation of undergraduate computing education in the USA?
  5. Who might participate: What stakeholders should be involved in designing strategies to catalyze the transformation of university computing education throughout the nation? What is the role of government in this process? Professional societies? Universities and faculty? Others?