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Notes and News

Chad Jenkins receives PECASE Award

Dr. Chad Jenkins, a 1996 Alma alum, has been selected as one of the recipients of the Presidential Early Career Award for Scientists and Engineers (PECASE) for his research on the development of methods for autonomous robot control and perception. His work advances the idea that robot control and computational perception are better learned from human demonstration rather than by explicit computer programming.

The PECASE program recognizes outstanding scientists and engineers who, early in their careers, show exceptional potential for leadership at the frontiers of knowledge. This Presidential Award is the highest honor bestowed by the United States Government on scientists and engineers beginning their independent careers.

While at Alma, Chad majored in Computer Science and Mathematics. He received his Ph.D in Computer Science from University of Southern California in 2003 and has been an Assistant Professor of Computer Science at Brown University since 2004. Read another version of this story.   Read all the CS Notes and News.

Akron-Fairgrove Wins Challenge

In its first ever appearance in the Alma College Robotics Challenge, Akron-Fairgrove High School swept both first and second places! Pictured at right are the members of the first place team.  Check out the photo album for this year's contest..

The Robotics Challenge is an invitational high school robotics tournament using the Lego Mindstorms Robotics Platform. Teams construct robots which compete against each other in an attempt to gather eggs and return them to their nest.  The Fifth Annual Alma College Robotics Challenge will be coming up in the spring of 2008.  Read more on our contest webpage, or contact Dr. Myles McNally for information on how your high school could participate.

CS Majors Win Best Poster Award

Undergraduate student researchers Stu Bachner ('06), Rosemary Dutka ('06), and Ben Tidman ('06) won the best poster award at the 10th annual Consortium for Computing Science Midwest Meeting, held September 23-24 at Millikin University.  Their poster was entitled Designing Effective Algorithm Visualizations, and outlined the results of their summer research experiences over the previous two summers.  This work was supported by the National Science Foundation. Dr. Myles McNally was the faculty advisor. Read more about Computer Science undergraduate research at Alma.

Alma Hosts NSF MindStorms Workshop

Alma College hosted a wokshop on using Lego MindStorms throughout the undergraduate computer science curriculum this past June. Twenty-three faculty from all over the country attended the three day workshop, which focused on the curriculum materials being developed under a National Science Foundation grant.  The faculty for the workshop were Myles McNally (Alma College) and Pamela Lawhead (University of Mississippi) with  Alma student Josh Borgerding ('06) assisting. Go to the website for the project.


Department Receives Two NSF Grants

The Department has received two grants from the National Science Foundation to participate in the collaborative development of new computer science curricular materials. One project will focus on developing a system for the creation and delivery of algorithm animations, while the other centers on using the Lego Mindstorms robotic kit in the undergraduate CS curriculum. Supervised at Alma College by Dr. Myles McNally, the projects will provide summer research experiences for students over the next three years. Read the full story.

 

Alma College has phenomenal 90 percent placement rates into medical and law schools, compared to a national average of 46.6 percent for medical school placement. More than 90 percent of all Alma graduates report working in full-time positions or attending graduate school within six months of graduation.

 

Graduate Profile

Alyson Crabtree

Alyson Crabtree
Graduation: 1990
Major: Computer Science

Alyson Crabtree started computer programming in high school. After struggling with her college decision, she decided to pursue her dream at Alma College.

“When I was looking for colleges, I was determined to get far away from home and assert my independence,” the 1990 graduate says. “To me, that meant getting out of Michigan. I visited some New England schools and was planning on heading east. But Alma kept pestering me, and when I objectively looked at what it had to offer, it met all of my criteria — liberal arts, computer science major and a small school.”