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Data structures for Text sequences

Iana Bakalova

Manuel A. Pérez-Quiñones

CSESI 2009: Computational Thinking

Computer Science Education Summer Institute 2009

Haverford College

Haverford, PA

 

June 29 - July 3, 2009

 

This photo is from June 30, 2009.

 

The Magic of Computing (PPT)

by Dr. Tom Way, Villanova University

 

CSTA - Computer Science Teachers Association

 

NECC National Conference

sponsored by the Int'l Society for Technology in Education (ISTE)

(A conference on using technology in K-12 in all types of classes)

Swansea University Maker Competition Winter 2014

Photographer: Micah Smith

All photos are the property of Creative Services and may not be used without permission. Please contact creative@jmu.edu if you are interested in using any photos included in our collection.

Data structures for Text sequences

Data structures for Text sequences

All images are copyright St Boniface's Catholic College. Please do not use without written permission. Thank you.

Data structures for Text sequences

Photographer: Rachael Winfrey

All photos provided are the property of Creative Services and may not be used without permission.

Please contact creative@jmu.edu if you are interested in using any photos included in our collection.

Photographer: Micah Smith

All photos are the property of Creative Services and may not be used without permission. Please contact creative@jmu.edu if you are interested in using any photos included in our collection.

Blair Academy Campus 2/14/17

Blair Academy programming class with Michael Garrant.

PHOTO BY Tyson Trish

  

Kimberly Bryant and her daughter, Kai Bryant on the TEDxSanFrancisco 2019 stage.

 

"Between 2007 and 2013, a 13% decrease in black women in the STEM field. The scarcity of black women in tech begins long before career. Less than 1/3 of Computer Science degrees go to black women. [...] Even today, I'm thankful for mentors. Still experience failures, just like every other leader, and they can hit to the core, but I've learned that when these failures are encountered, you need to get up and challenge the tribe to provide a soft space to land, gather self, and move forward again."

 

After spending more than two decades in the pharmaceutical and biotech industries as an engineering manager at various Fortune 100 companies, Kimberly Bryant started Black Girls CODE to introduce young women of color to the field of technology and computer programming with a concentration on entrepreneurial concepts. Her non-profit aims to train 1 million young women to code by 2040. In 2013, Bryant was honored by the White House for her work in tech inclusion and her focus on bridging the digital divide for girls.

 

Photo credit: Orange Photography

(For those who take other-school bashing personally, go elsewhere)

 

Ryerson's Computer Science Student Union on the left, UofT's on the right. Draw your own conclusions ;)

 

On the other hand, their walls are cooler than ours.

Laura Bocchi playing the harp at the Google reception

Dr. Guang Gao, a distinguished professor of electrical and computer engineering, along with Professor Roberto Giorgi, an associate professor at the Università degli Studi di Siena in Siena, Italy and primary investigator (Coordinator / Scientific Manager) of the TeraFlux project. The TeraFlux project seeks to exploit dataflow parallelism in teradevice computing and propose a complete solution to harness large-scale parallelism in an efficient way. The University of Delaware recently joined the TeraFlux project and received a grant connected to the project from the EU.

Rosemary Russell and a Google representative at the Google reception

TinoHacks 2017, April 15-16

Photographer: Rachael Winfrey

All photos provided are the property of Creative Services and may not be used without permission.

Please contact creative@jmu.edu if you are interested in using any photos included in our collection.

This is an example of a rainbow seen at sunset. The color of the sunlight is nearly red, causing some of the colors of the rainbow to be lost. Researchers captured this rainbow by simulating the color of the sunlight as it interacts with the water drops. (c) Philip Laven

Alex Sumner

Computer Science

Chancellor Scholar

Honors Program

President, Delta Alpha

 

How would you describe your WSSU experience?

Amazingly interesting. From the people that I’ve met to the different experiences that I’ve had to the situations that I’ve been in and witnessed. But I wouldn’t trade this experience for anything.

 

What were some of your favorite parts of your college experience?

Connecting with like minded individuals, meeting new types of people, gaining life long friends, and unforgettable experiences.

 

Have you engaged in internships, research projects, study abroad, student leadership, community outreach, or other experiences that are enhancing your time at WSSU?

I participated in research during my first two years and summers at WSSU and then I had an internship Nationwide during my third summer. I also experienced student leadership and community outreach through Phi Beta Sigma Fraternity, Inc. as I was Chapter President for an organization known for its service.

 

Did you face any obstacles while pursuing your degree?

The biggest obstacle was definitely speaking to people. I’ve never been the most outgoing person, and I’m still not, but I have come so far from when I first arrived at Winston.

 

What are your plans after graduation?

I’m honestly still trying to decide this myself. I’ve had a lot of good opportunities present themselves to me but what I’m leaning more towards right now is attending graduate school at A&T where I’ve been accepted into the Masters and PhD programs for Computer Science.

 

Are there any particular faculty, coaches, mentors, or staff that made a difference in your life?

I’ve had a lot who have definitely impacted me whether they know it or not. Of course my department chair, Dr. Elva Jones. The first professor I connected with and fraternity brother, Dr. Frederick Roundtree. My research mentor, Dr. Mustafa Atay. One of my favorite professors, someone I can always come talk to, and sor

The Computing Entrepreneurship Evening is a forum for CS/CE students to present their entrepreneurial ideas and to interact with local entrepreneurs. Students can enter the business plan competition and present their ideas. A jury formed by local entrepreneurs will three award prizes

"I like my stats, I'm happy with my card," Turner said. His special stat is his call sign for ham radio.

Photographer: Rachael Winfrey

All photos provided are the property of Creative Services and may not be used without permission.

Please contact creative@jmu.edu if you are interested in using any photos included in our collection.

David Kirk, Chief Technology Officer of NVIDIA, CUDA Software and GPU Parallel Computing Architecture, Vortrag 09.04.2008, Saarland University Competence Center of Computer Science, DFKI, www.uni-saarland.de/events/09_04_2008_628127331, courses.ece.uiuc.edu/ece498/al1/

 

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