This workshop will introduce college faculty to various resources that can be used to prepare students to acquire computational thinking, modeling and quantitative analysis skills that have become essential to the practice of modern biology. Hands-on sessions with software for building and running dynamic models, finding sequence motifs, inferring phylogeny and predicting structure will be coupled with pedagogy and examples of integration into the biology classroom. Hands-on tutorials on first two days will focus on: NetLogo for agent-based and system dynamics modeling; MATLAB/Scilab for flexible graphing, analysis and numerical computing; Biology Workbench for bioinformatics; and Gromacs for molecular dynamics. The focus will then shift to group work to develop materials for the classroom, with additional sessions based on participant interest.
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Jun 7 - Jun 13
University of California, Merced
Merced, CA
Local Coordinators:
Alaena Alilin, Martha Narro and Masakatsu Watanabe
This workshop will cover various ways that computers can be used to enhance and expand the educational experience of students enrolled in the undergraduate chemistry curriculum. Discussions and hands-on laboratory exercises on visualization, simulation, molecular modeling, and mathematical software will be presented.
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May 17 - May 23
Oklahoma State University
Stillwater, OK
Local Coordinators:
Dana Brunson
Lead Instructors:
Victoria Crockett, Clyde Metz, Henry Neeman and Shawn Sendlinger
Computational Engineering for Engineering Educators
This workshop focuses on applications of computational science in engineering and bioengineering education. The workshop will build upon earlier workshops held at SC08 Education Program in Austin, Texas and provide more in-depth work with undergraduate and graduate engineering faculty as well as interested professionals from industry. The workshop will introduce the basic competencies for modeling and simulation for undergraduate engineers and provide hands-on examples using MATLAB, Vensim, and other modeling tools. This will allow for more advanced sessions in using parallel MATLAB for signal image processing and several other possible applications, computational fluid dynamics using the Open Foam, open source package, and one or two other subareas depending upon demand.
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Jul 12 - Jul 18
Ohio Supercomputer Center
Columbus, OH
Local Coordinators:
not specified
Lead Instructors:
James Giuliani, Steven Gordon, Ashok Krishnmaurthy and Siddharth Samsi
This workshop focuses on physics education augmented with the resources of high performance computing (HPC). Primary workshop content draws from the traditional physics curriculum, illustrating how to reshape that content in the light of new scientific perspectives made possible by modern numerical computing. The workshop achieves this by demonstrating uses of modern computing methods and HPC to solve modern-day physics problems.
Computational Thinking in the Grades 6-12 Classroom
The purpose of this workshop is to expose participants to and inspire them with new techniques, teaching materials, and applications to use computational models in the grades 6-12 classroom. By bringing teachers from different disciplines together so that they can learn how to incorporate computational models into their classrooms, it will advance the use of computing in science education.
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Jul 12 - Jul 18
University of Florida
Gainesville, FL
Local Coordinators:
Stephanie Stevenson
Lead Instructors:
Clyde Metz, Bob Panoff, Susan Ragan and Stephanie Stevenson
The SC09 Education Program will occur November 14-17, 2009, in Portland, Oregon. Participants will be engaged in hands-on activities to engage them in applying computational science, grid computing and high performance computing resources in education.
Housing, travel, conference registration and meal costs are provided for participants. Participants are asked to pay a registration fee of $75 to cover food and materials. This fee will be refunded if notification of cancellations is received by October 1, 2009. Scholarships are available for people unable to cover the registration fee. Scholarship application instructions will be sent to participants once they are accepted.
Education Program participants are encouraged to stay for the full SC09 conference to benefit from all that the conference has to offer. Participants will need to cover their own housing and meals after November 17 through the remainder of the conference.
The program is open to undergraduate faculty, undergraduate and graduate students, and high school teachers.
The purpose of this workshop is to expose participants to and inspire them with new techniques, teaching materials, and applications to use computational models in the undergraduate curriculum. By bringing faculty from different disciplines together so that they can learn how to incorporate computational models into their classrooms and research projects, it will advance the use of computing in undergraduate science education. We desire to have participants from a broad range of disciplines, including computer science, mathematics, and the natural sciences.
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May 25 - May 30
Calvin College
Grand Rapids, MI
Local Coordinators:
Joel Adams and Randall Pruim
Lead Instructors:
Jose darruda, Bob Panoff, Stephanie Stevenson and Daniel Warner
Introduction to Parallel and Distributed Computing
This three day workshop focuses on computational science methodologies and the related parallel programming tools to help you tune your undergraduate science courses to the multi-core, cluster and distributed high performance computing computer architectures of the present day. The workshop is designed for undergraduate faculty to help them make changes to their science curriculum, however undergraduate or graduate students are welcome to attend with their faculty, if they are helping with this curricular process.
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Jan 7 - Jan 9
Middle East Technical University
Ankara, Turkey
Local Coordinators:
not specified
Lead Instructors:
Werner Krotz-Vogel, Tom Murphy and Charles Peck
Notify By:
Jan 7
Cancel By:
Jan 7
Attendees are expected to complete pre-workshop, daily, and post-workshop surveys, which help the presenters tune the workshop session to the actual participants, as well as help inform future workshops.
The Parallel Programming & Cluster Computing workshop focuses on techniques and tools for parallel computing. Much of this workshop concentrates on distributed parallelism (MPI); in addition, shared memory parallelism (OpenMP), instruction level parallelism, Graphics Processing Unit parallelism and hybrid shared/distributed parallelism are also explored. Participants will learn about developing, debugging, profiling and tuning of parallel applications across a variety of architectures, using tools from a variety of sources, including GNU, Intel, TotalView, and the Bootable Cluster CD. The material is designed for undergraduate faculty from a variety of disciplines who would like to add parallel computing to their undergraduate teaching and research. In addition, undergraduate and graduate students are encouraged to attend alongside a sponsoring faculty member. The workshop is hands-on, with exercises in both programming and curriculum development.
This workshop will be simulcast with the workshop at LSU, using remote telecommunication technologies, minimizing the effect of geographic distance as much as possible. Deposit for this workshop is only $100. Attendees are responsible for their own local housing.