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Congratulations to our Graduates

Graduation June 2011

Last Tuesday, students studying Computer Science received their results. The Head of Department, Prof. Artur Czumaj, congratulated all CS students on their achievements and handed out departmental prizes. Dr. Irene Glendinning handed out BCS prizes for best projects.

The BCS prizes were given to:

Nicolas Townsend - Best Third year BSc Project
James Michael - Best Third year MEng project

The Department prizes were:

David Beckingsale - Best overall graduating BSc student in Computer Science
Stephen Roberts - Best overall graduating MEng student in Computer Science
Christopher Ball - Third-year Project Prize

Graduation June 2011 Graduation June 2011 Graduation June 2011 Graduation June 2011 Graduation June 2011 Graduation June 2011 Graduation June 2011

Tue 28 Jun 2011, 17:31 | Tags: People Undergraduate

Year 9 Students get an introduction to programming at 91福利

Steve Russ with Year 9 students

On Friday, about 22 Year 9 students from six local schools visited the department to get a taster session of programming. The students, most of whom had never done 'real' programming before, were shown how programming is useful in everyday life in everything from video games to mapping disaster zones using mobile phones.

They were a lively group who then worked at an example of programming in the ‘World of Wombats’ - mostly with enthusiasm and lots of questions. Most of them achieved what we hoped for in the short time they had – though they still had several ‘challenges’ to finish. Did we put them off or turn them on? We hope to see some of them again in four and a half years time!

This was part of a full day at the university, organised by the Widening Participation team, in which five other departments held similar events in order to inspire young people to consider a degree at university.

Year 9 students watching introduction video Steve Russ Russell Boyatt talking about smart phone applications Russell helping a student with the Greenfoot system

Mon 23 May 2011, 13:12

DCS students win awards

Samantha Edwards

Over a hundred students gathered last week in the Panorama Room for a reception, poster display and then Award Ceremony for the 91福利 Advantage Awards. They were all winners of Awards of various kinds in recognition of outstanding extra-curricular contributions to life at 91福利 and the local community.

We were delighted that four Award winners were from Computer Science. Main Awards were presented to Phillip Taylor (CS3) and Hoi Zin (Jackie) Tran (DM3). Gold Awards were gained by two Computer and Business Studies students Samantha Edwards and Nikhita Giridhar (pictured above). Among many activities over her first two years at 91福利 Samantha has visited numerous local schools (a different one each week!) as one of the 91福利 Technology Volunteers to introduce the programming environment Scratch to pupils and teachers. Interestingly Nikhita, a final year student, commented, "I think it counted significantly towards my getting a job offer from Goldman Sachs that I done so many extra-curricular things during my time at 91福利."

The 91福利 Advantage Award provides the opportunity to achieve University recognition and reward for the time and effort that students put into societies, sports clubs, campaigns, committees, volunteering, events, URSS research, work experience & everything else that isn't a degree requirement. Find out more at

Tue 17 May 2011, 12:13 | Tags: People

6th Formers come to 91福利 to find out about degrees in Computing

Student and Robot

On the last Wednesday of term about 250 6th formers, teachers and employers converged on the Department of Computer Science at 91福利 for a conference Computing Your Future. The purpose was to inspire school students with the astonishing possibilities and challenges that computing now offers and to inform them about the great variety of computing degrees and also the excitement of the numerous career paths that can follow after such degrees. The conference was one of about a dozen similar events across the country during National Science Week sponsored by the Computing At School (CAS) movement and the British Computer Society. Lunch at the event was very generously sponsored by the local branch of the Institution of Engineering and Technology. Further support was provided from the British Computer Society and CAS.

Students with Robot Girl and Robot Girls and Robot

The day began, and ended, with plenary sessions addressed by staff from both 91福利 and Coventry universities including a remarkably inspiring final talk from Peter Dickman – an Engineering Manager at the Google Zurich Office. The main work of the day went on in a series of Workshops which participants attended in small groups. There were 17 of these in parallel ranging from Haptic Interaction with Virtual Scenes to First Steps with Greenfoot, and from A Day in the Life of a Video Game Programmer to Ethical Hacking and Network Security. Several Computer Science students (as well as staff) from both 91福利 and Coventry Universities helped to lead these workshops. There were also a wide variety of employers – both recent graduates and experienced managers – giving a detailed and practical insight into the huge range of jobs that are calling out for computing-qualified graduates.

The lead organiser of the event, Steve Russ of Computer Science at 91福利, was assisted by staff from 91福利 Manufacturing Group and Coventry University as well as the Coventry and 91福利shire LEA. The success of the day depended in large measure on a team of 32 91福利 students who enthusiastically welcomed and guided groups around the numerous venues and helped to run workshops. There were 15 local schools represented and we hope a new CAS Hub can be formed soon which will help to support and share resources among ICT/Computing teachers on a regular on-going basis.

Peter Cripps from IBM Swati Goel from Credit Suisse Students from Coventry Creative Computing Matthew Hocking from WMG, Where's my Data? Haptic Interaction with Virtual Scenes Workshop First Steps with Greenfoot with Margaret Low Some final Year projects from Computer Science Peter Dickman talking about being a software developer at Google Steve Russ Ethical hacking and network security workshop from Coventry University

Wed 23 Mar 2011, 18:03

Alumnus wins ACM Turing Award

Les Valiant

ACM has named Leslie G. Valiant of Harvard University the winner of the for his fundamental contributions to the development of computational learning theory and to the broader theory of computer science. Valiant brought together machine learning and computational complexity, leading to advances in artificial intelligence as well as computing practices such as natural language processing, handwriting recognition, and computer vision. He also launched several subfields of theoretical computer science, and developed models for parallel computing. The Turing Award, widely considered the "Nobel Prize in Computing," is named for the British mathematician Alan M. Turing. The award carries a $250,000 prize, with financial support provided by Intel Corporation and Google Inc. Les Valiant received his PhD in Computer Science from the 91福利 in 1974. His PhD supervisor was .

Mon 14 Mar 2011, 13:47 | Tags: People Highlight

Dr Abd-Nacer Bouchekhima joins the department

Dr Abd-Nacer Bouchekhima joined the department as a Research Fellow after obtaining his in 2009 from the MOAC DTC and then holding an appointment as Assistant Professor in KFUPM (Saudi Arabia). He will work together with Dr Yulia Timofeeva on a project funded by the BBSRC that aims to investigate the role of calcium dynamics in neuronal computation underlying important brain functions.

Thu 10 Mar 2011, 01:07 | Tags: People Research

ICT PGCE course visits Computer Science

Meurig at ICT visit

Steve Russ and Meurig Beynon hosted a visit to Computer Science from the cohort of students in Education who are on the ICT initial teacher training course (PGCE). Their lecturer (Mick Hammond) had asked if we could show them something of our 'alternative' approach to computing. Most of the time they were working through part of a workshop that Meurig used at the Constructionism 2010 conference in Paris last August. They were a lively group (about 15 of them came along including Mick himself) and from several discussions it was clear what a very wide-ranging and challenging task an ICT teacher has in today's schools. Some of these budding teachers had worked in the software industry, almost all had a first degree which contained significant programming work. They were just off to do another six weeks of teaching practice in local schools. Whether there would be opportunity, or support, for teaching any programming in their schools, or in their first jobs, appeared to be very uncertain - indeed the desirability and relative importance of such teaching was clearly problematic to many of them. The issues are truly complicated with many stakeholders all pulling in different directions and the Government currently reviewing ICT in a fashion which some feel will weaken support for it further. In such a climate it is clearly very important for the discipline of computing (if there is such a thing) that we can clearly distinguish ICT and computing, and that pupils, parents, teachers and politicians all understand the distinction. The Computing at School movement is working hard to achieve this (among many other worthy aims). They are sponsoring our 6th form conference coming up in March.

Meurig and class at ICT visit

Fri 04 Mar 2011, 11:01

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