Skip to main content

Please Read: Nominations for Outstanding Seniors; Senior Thesis Info

Hello!
As graduation quickly approaches, it is time for the Allen School to determine it’s annual undergraduate award winners. Please quickly review the following information:
Outstanding Senior Nominations:
This award is based on academic excellence, research and/or industry experience, and Allen School and campus/community involvement. Last year we awarded four students. This year we have an informal nomination process so we make sure stellar students don’t go unnoticed by the selection committee. Even just a few sentences about your most excellent peers would be helpful. Please submit nominations via this form by 9am on Wednesday, May 23rd. You are welcome to nominate more than one person. All students graduating fall 2017, winter/spring/summer 2018 are eligible.
Best Senior Thesis:
Graduating CSE honors students who submit their thesis by June 1st are eligible for the Best Senior Thesis award (last year we awarded two).  If you would like to be eligible for the award, please talk to your supervising faculty member about a nomination letter they must provide (also due June 1). More info here about best senior thesis and more general info here about Allen School honors and how to submit your thesis (regardless if you would like to be considered for best thesis or not).
Thank you! Please contact me directly if you have any questions,
Maggie
maggiem@cs.washington.edu
May 17, 2018

Research Workshop & Lab Tour on Wed, May 23rd, 2018

Hello, please see the following message from UW’s Technology & Business Association:

We are from Technology & Business Association, aiming to help UW students who are interested in exploring research. In this workshop, we will tell you the importance of doing research, and the process of applying for research opportunities. Researchers from Machine Learning, Robotics, Informatics and International Studies we invited will share their amazing experiences. You can also join our Lab Tour to CSE and Robotics Labs. Besides, free egg tarts and milk tea will be provided. Sign up link: https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSftiHV_fiU9CTuml22CdbbNcioEQMDHudpLDrbAACNp7YRALA/viewform.
Sign up and invite your friends today!

Wed, May 23rd, 3-6pm

 

 

May 17, 2018

Now hiring outreach Ambassadors for 2018-19!

The Allen School is now hiring Allen School Ambassadors for the 2018-19 school year! If you’re excited to share computer science with younger students, apply now (https://goo.gl/forms/bEi9NtBG24DCx2xe2)! Application closes Wed May 23 at 11:59pm If you have questions, email outreach@cs.washington.edu.
For more information about the position and the application process, please refer to the web page below:
May 16, 2018

Reminder: ACMW How to Deal with Sexual Harassment event

Please RSVP to attend the ACMW How to Deal with Sexual Harassment event happening next Monday, May 21st, from 6:00pm – 8:00pm in Bagley 131.
 
If you RSVP before midnight on Friday, 5/18, you will be guaranteed food!

To RSVP, please fill out this form (https://tinyurl.com/acmw-harassment).
May 16, 2018

Ugrad Lunch with the Director (Hank) – Wednesday May 23rd 12-1pm

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.

RSVP Link

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!

May 16, 2018

Mini-Robothon 2018

Mini-Robothon 2018
Sponsored by Seattle Robotics Society

  • Saturday May 19, 2018
  • Multiple contests –  including (IEEE) Micromouse and SRS Robo-Magellan
  • @ Kent FIRST WA Fieldhouse
  • Check out the website at

https://robothon.org/may-19th-special-contest-day/

May 15, 2018

summer class in prison, V/R project

Honors 230A: Education Inside Prison

Take a class that will change your life!

 

Join us this Summer B Term (2018) for a series of classes at the Monroe Correctional Complex (transportation provided).

 

This class will offer an extraordinary opportunity to be involved in the creation of an education- and community-based program that will potentially have a very large impact. This project emerged from previous sessions of this Honors class, so you will be building on work accomplished by many other students both inside and outside prison.

 

Our class sessions at the prison are Wednesdays during B term: July 25, Aug. 1, 8, and 15. Students do NOT need to be in the Honors Program to enroll. All students must be over 18. Contact the instructor, Claudia Jensen (cjensen@uw.edu), for more information.

 

SLN 11752                    Tues./Thurs. on the UW campus, 11:30-12:20

5 cr                                Wed. at the prison, 11:00 – 5:00

 

H230B In Your Name: Education inside Prison, preliminary outline of class projects, April 2018

 

Here is some preliminary information about the summer B term class to be held at the Twin Rivers Unit (TRU) at the Monroe prison.

First, please make sure you can attend all of the class sessions scheduled for TRU: the Wednesdays of B term, July 24, Aug. 1, 8, 15. These sessions are at the heart of the class, and obviously there are no make ups!

Second, all students must be at least 18 years old – no exceptions. You will need to submit, via Claudia, information to be sent to the Dept. of Corrections in order to be cleared to enter the prison; we’ll also have you sign forms saying that you acknowledge that when we are at the prison, we are under the jurisdiction of the Dept. of Corrections. Please note that, although TRU is ADA compliant, there may be other issues to consider that would represent normal accommodations at the UW but might prove more difficult in the prison environment (medications, for example). Please contact Claudia ASAP if you have questions or concerns.

Now, here’s the basic layout of the class: we’ll work together with a group of TRU student/inmates on the Wednesdays of B term. Each class session is intense, 3 hours, plus travel/clearance time. Transportation is provided, and we’ll leave as a group from the UW campus at 11:00 am on the Wednesdays; return at around 5:00 pm (traffic permitting).  We have additional on-campus classes, on Tues/Thurs during B term (11:30-12:20). I view our travel time as valuable class time – you’ll see what I mean after our first session!

We will be working on three areas, all of which are loosely related to education. These topics were suggested and developed by the TRU students (I see them about once a month throughout the year). You don’t have to pick a topic right away, but during our first TRU session, we’ll have presentations of these projects and then divide into groups (mixed UW/TRU) and work very intensively on these topics. An overall theme is transforming the educational environment at the prison, or, as your fellow students have said, “how do we turn the convict code into a citizen code?”

One of our project deals specifically with educational opportunities inside the prison and creative ways we can provide alternatives. Although there are lots of good courses available online, you need to keep in mind that there is NO INTERNET IN PRISON – so one of the things we’ll think about is how we might be able to make such content available. Right now, I’m trying to figure out what kinds of equipment there is at TRU for showing videos, DVDs, etc., with the idea that maybe we can propose ways to bring some sustained course content to this environment. Are there other such programs pre-approved by other prisons? Can we figure out ways to leverage the opportunities to take paper-based correspondence classes among a larger group of students (for example, peer-to-peer learning)? What are the rules governing educational availability at the prison, and how do these rules impact students with long sentences to serve? Obviously this is still in progress but also lots of interesting brainstorming opportunities.

The next two topics (and actually the first one also) might involve Virtual Reality. I’ve been talking to the director of the UW’s Reality Lab, who is quite interested in bringing V/R into the prison in relevant ways. We also have some leads on this by collaborating with another program at one of the state’s prisons, in which inmates are learning coding skills related to V/R. So, how might these tools be used, for example, in preparing for reentry after serving ones’ sentence (V/R tours of college campuses? grocery stores? Dept. of Licensing offices?). What are the limitations of such technology within a prison environment and how can we address them productively? What is the value of using V/R over something else?

A final project involves the question of aging in prison – with the long sentences given out over the last few decades, the result is an aging prison population with special health and physical needs and stresses. How does this affect the prison environment as a whole? What happens when  a 19-year-old shares a cell with a 75-year-old? Can V/R be used in a kind of therapeutic fashion to alleviate some of the physical stresses that are felt especially by older prisoners? This is a topic the men felt very strongly about, so I hope we can get creative here. I know that Prof. Herbert (LSJ) is doing research on this and I’ll be talking to him soon.

I look forward to sharing ideas with all of you and working together with the TRU students to create some new and powerful opportunities. This class has had a real impact in the past (I’ll tell you more about it in our first session), and you will have the opportunity to make a real difference in people’s lives, both inside and outside the prison.

Let me know if you have any questions or concerns,

Claudia

May 15, 2018

Make the Most of Your Internship

Worried about your upcoming internship? Wondering what working is like? Join ACM-W this Wednesday May 16 from 5:30 – 6:30 in CSE 305 to hear from a panel of students about their experiences interning! As always all CSE students are welcome!
If you are interested RSVP at https://tinyurl.com/acmw-internship1
 
Hope to see you there!
Nicole Sudore 
ACM-W PR Chair 
May 14, 2018

Husky Tech & Google Present: Patch Perfect

What happens when applications crash at Google?

 

Join HuskyTech and Google Site Reliability Engineers (SRE) at our collaboration event with to learn about disaster recovery! Teams will get hands on experience with Google Engineers to implement fixes to situational outages. Come learn about the frameworks Google Engineers use to identify issues, diagnose the problems, and create quick + effective solutions to real industry problems.

RSVP link:  https://www.tinyurl.com/HuskyTechXGoogle/

Facebook link: https://www.tinyurl.com/HuskyTechXGoogleFBEvent/

May 14, 2018

Emily Chang (Brotopia), Tuesday, 4 p.m., EEB 105

From: Ed Lazowska <lazowska@cs.washington.edu>
Date: Mon, May 14, 2018 at 8:29 AM
Subject: [cs-ugrads] Emily Chang (Brotopia), Tuesday, 4 p.m., EEB 105
To: <talks@cs.washington.edu>, eScience_BBL <eScience_BBL@uw.edu>, Researchers <researchers@cs.washington.edu>, <cs-ugrads@cs.washington.edu>

Emily Chang (host of Bloomberg Tech and author of the recent
horrifying best-seller Brotopia) will speak in the Paul G. Allen
School at 4 p.m. on Tuesday May 15 in EEB 105.

Please attend! Here’s the (rather Spartan) announcement:

https://www.cs.washington.edu/events/colloquia/details?id=3035

Thanks!
_______________________________________________
Cs-ugrads mailing list
Cs-ugrads@cs.washington.edu
https://mailman.cs.washington.edu/mailman/listinfo/cs-ugrads

May 14, 2018

« Newer PostsOlder Posts »