WASHINGTON, DC — The Computing Research Association is pleased to announce the appointment of Andries van Dam, Brown University Professor of Technology and Education and Professor of Computer Science, to lead its new effort to improve the quality of computing education, particularly at the undergraduate level. Professor van Dam will chair CRA’s new Education Committee, called CRA-E, charged to think broadly about the future of computing education
I am delighted that Professor van Dam has agreed to service as the initial chair of CRA-E, said Daniel Reed, Microsofts Scalable and Multicore Computing Strategist and Chair of CRA. Not only is Andy a distinguished and respected researcher, he is passionate about computing education, both its theory and its practice. Moreover, he has long worked to apply novel technologies to computing education.
CRA established the CRA-E after declining enrollments in computer science led to a reexamination of the image of computing and the nature of the 21st Century computing curriculum. The new committee seeks to understand how the broad computing community needs to move forward in order to develop principles and philosophy underlying the computing education of the future. I dont believe we can continue the indefinite addition of layers to the computing curriculum onion that was defined in the 1970s, said Reed. We need to rethink some of our fundamental assumptions about computing education approaches and content, and Professor van Dam is the right person to lead that effort.
Professor van Dam has been on Browns faculty since 1965 and was one of the founders and first Chair of its Computer Science Department. Along with J.D. Foley, van Dam authored seminal texts on computer graphics, and has authored or co-authored over 100 papers. He is a fellow of the IEEE, Association for Computing Machinery, American Academy of Arts and Sciences, and the American Association for the Advancement of Science, a member of the National Academy of Engineering, recipient of awards for outstanding contributions to computing education from ACM, IEEE and SIGCSE, and a winner of the 2002 CRA Distinguished Service Award. van Dam also served as the Chair of CRA from 1985 to 1987.
About CRA. CRA was established 30 years ago and has members at more than 250 research entities in academia, industry and government. Its mission is to strengthen research and advance education in the computing fields, expand opportunities for women and minorities, and improve public and policymaker understanding of the importance of computing and computing research in society.
For more about CRA.
Congratulations to Edmund M. Clarke of Carnegie Mellon, E. Allen Emerson of UT-Austin, and Joseph Siafkis of Verimag Laboratory in France, on being awarded ACM’s 2007 A.M. Turing award, the highest honor in computing, for their work on a quality assurance process known as Model Checking!
ACM has all the details in their press release.
It looks like a decent year for Advanced Scientific Computing Research at the Department of Energys Office of Science. Following the FY08 omnibus, in which ASCR received an almost 25 percent increase, the President has requested another 5 percent increase for FY09, for a total of $368.8 million. Here is a brief breakdown:
- Applied mathematics and computer science research $93.2 million
- Scientific Discovery through Advanced Computing (SciDAC) $58.1 million
- High-performance computing and network facilities and testbeds $217.5 million
The high-performance computing number includes:
- $54.8 million for the National Energy Research Scientific Computing Center
- $85 million for Oak Ridge Leadership Computing Facility
- $30 million for Argonne Leadership Computing Facility
- $25 million for an Energy Sciences Network (ESNet)
US high-performance computing is expected to reach a petaflop this year at Oak Ridge and Raymond Orbach, the director of the Office of Science, stated at the budget briefing presentation that the US will increase computing power by a factor of ten every two years moving forward.
Overall, the Office of Science did well in the request with $4.7 billion, an 18.8 percent increase. This keeps the Office of Science close to the ACI trajectory announced by the President in 2006. Funding levels include:
- $805 million for high energy physics
- $510 million for nuclear physics
- $568.5 million for biological and environmental research
- $1.57 billion for basic energy science
- $493 million for fusion energy sciences
- $110 million for science laboratories infrastructure
In FY08, there were $123.6 million in earmarks in a total appropriation of $4.02 billion, which the President has zeroed out in the FY09 budget request.