|
|  |
Washington University in St. Louis News & Information > University Groups > School of Engineering & Applied Science >

Computer Communications Research Center

| News Stories & Tip Sheets: |
Showing Stories 1 through 7 of 7.
- Show Home
|
 |
'Not your father's computer science class'
 Grant allows computer science to explore active learning

Feb. 23,
2009 -- Computer science faculty at Washington University in St. Louis are exposing their undergraduate students to learning in ways that prepare them for interaction in the real work place. It's not about "staying between the lines," but more about getting out of your seat, moving around and interacting with your classmates. It's called active learning, a learning-laboratory- based tutorial teaching concept.

|
Partnership reaching students on a national level
 Research-based undergraduate course expands beyond WUSTL

Nov. 25,
2008 --
Washington University in St. Louis is in the spotlight for its pivotal role in the Genomics Education Partnership, a collaborative effort to provide research experience in genomics to undergraduate classrooms across the country. At the helm of this mission is Sarah C.R. Elgin, Ph.D., WUSTL professor of biology and professor of education in Arts & Sciences, as well as professor of biochemistry & molecular biophysics and professor of genetics in the School of Medicine.

|
Networking, managing information for the military
 Novel network is proposed for Department of Defense

Aug. 6,
2008 --
 |
| Image courtesy U.S. Army |
| WUSTL's Patrick Crowley is proposing a novel network for the U.S. Department of Defense (DoD) to manage information better simultaneously in real-time. |
Patrick Crowley, a WUSTL computer architect, intends to design a new kind of network for the Department of Defense (DoD) to facilitate real-time information in the field so that every foot soldier, commander, tank and transport vehicle is networked. Crowley will use the WUSTL programmable network platform that can scale real-time information sharing over several orders of magnitude, from a handful of interconnected platforms to thousands and tens of thousands. He hopes to facilitate better information sharing in the military.

|
Do the math
 Consider supplemental math programs as holiday gift

Nov. 12,
2007 --
 |
| David Kilper/WUSTL Photo |
| A math problem review session at the Kumon-Ladue math program on Clayton Road in Ladue. |
Download
|
Parents of school-aged children might want to think of giving their children an enduring holiday gift this year: enrollment in a supplemental mathematics program. While it can cost anywhere from $80 to $110 a month, the results of practicing mathematics nearly daily is rewarding to both students and parents. In fact, parents might be even bigger recipients of this gift than their children. While their children gain self-esteem and confidence, the parents very likely will feel a sense of relief and pride in their children's accomplishment.

|
Planning for a pandemic
 Round tables address IT problems, infrastructure, workplace concerns over flu pandemic

June 8,
2006 --
 |
| Temperature is rising as St. Louis tackles the ramifications of a flu epidemic. |
St. Louis is one of the few cities trying to stay ahead of the pandemic curve, thanks to workshops being conducted this spring and summer that bring together area institutions and businesses in round table formats. The Business Community and Pandemic Flu Roundtable is sponsored by the Washington University School of Engineering and Applied Science's Center for the Application of Information Technology (CAIT) and the University's School of Medicine. CAIT is St. Louis' center for IT training, professional development, and executive interaction for more than 25 years. More than 100 business and institutional attendees are learning to address everything from potential vaccines and medications to sick leave policy and protective gear. More...

|
Free networking opportunities
 State-of-the-art laboratory offered to researchers, students

Sept. 7,
2005 --
 |
| A router in the new Open Network Laboratory, funded by NSF. |
A novel networking service has been made available to the research community by computer scientists at Washington University in St. Louis, enabling researchers and students remote, free use of the latest networking technology. Ultimately, the new Open Network Laboratory (ONL )can lead to innovations that can expand the capability of the Internet and other networking environments, said its director, Jonathan S. Turner, Ph.D., Henry Edwin Sever Professor of Engineering, and professor of computer science and engineering at WUSTL.

|
The beat of a different drum
 Honoring time, computer greats consider evading time

March 3,
2004 --
 |
| To meet design and cost changes, industry and government are considering clockless computing. |
Computing royalty, including Ivan Sutherland, the father of computer graphics, and Wesley A. Clark, the designer of the world's first personal computer, will gather at a computing symposium Friday, March 26th, 2004, from 1:00-5:30 p.m. at Washington University in St. Louis's Whitaker Hall Auditorium. As part of the University's 150th anniversary of its founding, participants will honor time by contemplating how computing can evade time as the industry prepares to go clockless.

|
Showing Stories 1 through 7 of 7.
- Show Home
|
 |
|
|  |
|