Jenifer, Maggie, Chloe, Pim and I are still here to help you all out as well, in addition to graduate advisers Elise, Dave and Garrett. Raven and Jeremy are also still here heading up our Diversity and Outreach team.
We are excited for the year to begin and look forward to seeing you all back this Wed.
Sincerely,
Crystal Eney and the CSE Advising Team
We finally have the list of 2018-2019 capstones. Please fill out the survey linked on the capstone page to request a space in a capstone for this coming year. Most students should only be requesting capstones after they have finished most of their 300 level courses and ideally at least one 400 by the time you enroll in the capstone course. (There are exceptions to this, such as Accessibility – contact instructors for more information)
Computer Engineering students and BS/MS students who are required to have a capstone will be given priority, followed by graduating seniors in Computer Science. You can select your first, second and third choice. You will only be placed into one capstone, if you want to take more than one you can register on a space available basis after registration starts for that quarter. I’ll try to have decisions out by August. 30th.
We are still waiting on faculty to provide more details about the Fall cloud computing capstone and the spring technology for the developing world capstone. When I hear from those faculty I’ll update the webpage and send additional news posts.
~Sincerely,
CSE Advising
https://s3-us-west-2.amazonaws.com/www-cse-public/education/time-sched/teaching2018-2019.html
We have just released the teaching schedule for the upcoming year with instructor names. The UW time schedule should be updated in the next week with this information. While things can still change at this point, this is our best information at this point in time.
Capstone information will be sent out hopefully early next week after we finalize information on all the expected capstone courses. Stay tuned for that message.
CSE Advising
CSE 490 G1/CSE 599 G1 — Introduction to Deep Learning
CSE 490, Information and Communication Technology for Development
Prerequisite: CSE 332 and 331 or 351
Counts as a CSE Senior Elective
SLN 23346 , offered MWF 130-220
This is an engineering course teaching the use of Information and Communication Technologies (ICTs) to address specific needs of developing countries. While ICTs are having an enormous impact on livelihoods worldwide, deployment environments vary dramatically based on available infrastructure and technologies accessible to people. The goal of this course is provide background to develop and deploy technologies in a global setting that address development challenges. Specific topics will include: health information systems, data collection technologies, applications for basic mobile phones, user interface design for low literate populations, behavior change communication, voice based social networks, community cellular networks, open source projects for global good, low-cost smartphones, satellite image analysis and mobile financial services. The course will consider a wide range of application domains including health, education, agriculture, finance, and livelihood.
The class sessions will be a lecture / discussion format with readings and assignments. There will be a series of small group implementation projects to gain familiarity with different technologies and software systems and to explore the design space for various applications.
Good Morning! The BS/MS application is now open.
A couple of notes about the application:
The application is linked from the BS/MS application page: https://www.cs.washington.edu/academics/bsms/application
Here are the timelines for this application cycle:
May 21 – June 11th: Application Open
June 11th: Application Deadline
Decisions emailed early July
Questions? Email Jen <jenifer@cs.uw.edu> or Crystal <ceney@cs.uw.edu>
The Ugrad Lunch with the Director, Hank Levy, will be next week on Wednesday, May 23rd from 12-1pm. We need an RSVP ahead of time so please take a minute to fill this out if there is any chance that you’ll be able to stop by.
This is a chance for CSE Current Students to eat pizza, talk with Hank, eat more pizza, talk with advisors, and eat more pizza. We’re hoping to collect questions ahead of time, so please let us know what you’d like to hear about so we can make the best use of your time.
We are looking forward to seeing you all!
Present your posters at the 2018 Allen School Spring Poster Fair!
Hello Allen School undergrads and 5th year masters students!
We are excited to announce our second annual Paul G. Allen School Spring Poster Fair! All students who have participated in any capstone, project courses, or research this year are encouraged to apply to present their posters.
The Event
The 2018 Allen School undergraduate poster session will be held on Thursday, June 7th, from 3:30-5 p.m. in the Atrium. The poster session is open to all BS and BS/MS students who participated in a capstone course (such as 475 and 481) or project course (such as 440 or any other 400 level project course) or research during the 2017-18 academic year.
This will be a more formal event, with high profile Allen School alumni and friends coming to view your work. Presenting students are welcome to bring family members, as it will be the day before our CSE commencement ceremony.
There is a short application process. Student posters will be selected based on various factors including the quality of the abstract in the application, the likely interests of the Allen School alumni/friends visiting, and our goal to present a wide range of ‘cool’ projects from multiple courses.
Why participate?
The Details
Application Process
Fill out this short form: https://goo.gl/forms/q74k36ayR9tQIazN2
Applications are due by end of day on May 23rd
Presenters will be notified by May 30th.
Questions? Email Kay at kbeck@cs.washington.edu or the advisors @ugrad-advisor@cs.washington.edu