View allAll Photos Tagged computerscience

In June, I got to join five esteemed women to talk on a "Women in Tech" panel for the ProjectCSGirls National Gala. I was aware I was an animated speaker, but it was still interesting to me to see pictures of HOW animated.

 

Learn more about ProjectCSGirls at www.projectcsgirls.com/

 

View my blog at tgaw.wordpress.com

Boulder Public Library closing CSED 2016 event - 23rd Studios Photography Boulder

Pictures were also taken in the Faculty Lounge; when Patrick left CACS, this room still had to be furnished.

Two students catching some Z’s at 3 a.m. in the basement of the James and Anne Duderstadt Building during MHacks 16, the first in-person hack-a-thon since the Covid pandemic in the pre-dawn hours of Sunday November 19, 2023.

 

“MHacks is the largest community of student builders on campus,” said Spencer Goodwin, an undergraduate in Computer Science and Engineering and co-director of MHacks. For this event the builders are coding a project from scratch in order to solve a real world problem. The teams can have up to four members and are judged on uniqueness, creativity of design, and how technical their projects are. Hack-a-thon began on Saturday at noon and continued for 24 hours with a closing ceremony at 3 p.m.

 

Photo: Brenda Ahearn/University of Michigan, College of Engineering, Communications and Marketing

In June, I got to join five esteemed women to talk on a "Women in Tech" panel for the ProjectCSGirls National Gala. I was aware I was an animated speaker, but it was still interesting to me to see pictures of HOW animated.

 

Learn more about ProjectCSGirls at www.projectcsgirls.com/

 

View my blog at tgaw.wordpress.com

October 6, 2018. Chapel Hill, North Carolina.

In 2014 a handful of companies in Boulder thought, “wouldn’t it be cool if the whole town celebrated Computer Science Education Week and Hour of Code?”

 

And so they did just that! There was a week long, town-wide celebration of technology, innovation, and computer science educational fun for parents, kids, and teachers.

 

Programs were open to kids as young as 4 and as old as high school. Apps were made, robots were built, Scratch was learned, and a lot of families exclaimed that this kind of learning disguised as festive fun was just what they needed to help their kids explore CSED.

 

Photos by 23rd Studios - Paul Talbot - Please contact 23rd Studios for permissions - info@23rdstudios.com

 

In 2014 a handful of companies in Boulder thought, “wouldn’t it be cool if the whole town celebrated Computer Science Education Week and Hour of Code?”

 

And so they did just that! There was a week long, town-wide celebration of technology, innovation, and computer science educational fun for parents, kids, and teachers.

 

Programs were open to kids as young as 4 and as old as high school. Apps were made, robots were built, Scratch was learned, and a lot of families exclaimed that this kind of learning disguised as festive fun was just what they needed to help their kids explore CSED.

 

Photos by 23rd Studios - Paul Talbot - Please contact 23rd Studios for permissions - info@23rdstudios.com

 

Mike Hinchey and Tiziana Margaria, programme co-chairs, at the Keyworth Centre

In 2014 a handful of companies in Boulder thought, “wouldn’t it be cool if the whole town celebrated Computer Science Education Week and Hour of Code?”

 

And so they did just that! There was a week long, town-wide celebration of technology, innovation, and computer science educational fun for parents, kids, and teachers.

 

Programs were open to kids as young as 4 and as old as high school. Apps were made, robots were built, Scratch was learned, and a lot of families exclaimed that this kind of learning disguised as festive fun was just what they needed to help their kids explore CSED.

 

Photos by 23rd Studios - Paul Talbot - Please contact 23rd Studios for permissions - info@23rdstudios.com

 

In 2014 a handful of companies in Boulder thought, “wouldn’t it be cool if the whole town celebrated Computer Science Education Week and Hour of Code?”

 

And so they did just that! There was a week long, town-wide celebration of technology, innovation, and computer science educational fun for parents, kids, and teachers.

 

Programs were open to kids as young as 4 and as old as high school. Apps were made, robots were built, Scratch was learned, and a lot of families exclaimed that this kind of learning disguised as festive fun was just what they needed to help their kids explore CSED.

 

Photos by 23rd Studios - Paul Talbot - Please contact 23rd Studios for permissions - info@23rdstudios.com

 

Jeannie Albrecht, Assistant Professor of Computer Science, Williams College, Williamstown, MA. Photo by Kevin Bubriski, Jan. 09.

In June, I got to join five esteemed women to talk on a "Women in Tech" panel for the ProjectCSGirls National Gala. I was aware I was an animated speaker, but it was still interesting to me to see pictures of HOW animated.

 

Learn more about ProjectCSGirls at www.projectcsgirls.com/

 

View my blog at tgaw.wordpress.com

1 2 ••• 67 68 70 72 73 ••• 79 80