Re: [change] Special Change Seminar **Wednesday 10:30-11:30**
Livestream link available here! https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DLH2dYUkDqg On Wed, Dec 4, 2019 at 10:31 AM Matthew Johnson wrote: > Reminder that this will begin in 5 minutes, in CSE2-371! > > On Mon, Dec 2, 2019 at 8:03 PM Matthew Johnson > wrote: > >> Hello! >> >> We will have Josh Hug from UC Berkeley joining us this week for a special >> change seminar on Wednesday at 10:30 in CSE2-371. (There will not be a >> speaker on Tuesday.) >> >> We hope to see you all there, but if you can’t make it we will send out a >> livestream link before the talk on Wednesday as well! >> >> *Embedding Social Impact Awareness into Introductory CS Education* >> >> *Abstract* >> Computer science and data science education provide our students with >> tremendous power and responsibility immediately after graduation. Many of >> our graduates find themselves embedded in organizations like Facebook, >> Google, and Amazon that shape the destinies of billions of people around >> the world. As university instructors, we do a great job providing the >> technical foundation for our students' future careers, but I believe that >> we could do a much better job helping students chart the broader narrative >> arcs of their lives. >> >> Berkeley has long had a dedicated Social Implications of Computing >> Course. In this class, we discuss the impacts of computing on all aspects >> of society, and have students discuss and reflect on some of the big >> ethical challenges faced by technical workers and entrepreneurs, e.g. free >> policies on social media platforms. Recently, we have begun to integrate >> such bigger picture discussions into our technical coursework. In this >> talk, I will describe these efforts to integrate professional development, >> career goal reflection, and ethics into three core technical courses in UC >> Berkeley's CS and Data Science Majors, as well as the challenges we've >> faced along the way. >> >> *Bio* >> Josh Hug is an Associate Teaching Professor in Computer Science at UC >> Berkeley. He completed his PhD in EECS at UC Berkeley in 2011, with a >> primary focus on reverse engineering of bacterial signal processing systems >> and bacterial decision making and a minor focus in education. After >> Berkeley, he taught at Princeton from 2011-2014, where he helped develop >> the Princeton Algorithms MOOC on Coursera. He joined the Berkeley EECS >> faculty in 2014. He most frequently teaches Data Structures, Data Science, >> and the Social Implications of Computing, and is the Equity and Inclusion >> Officer for CS undergraduates. His primary research interest is in learning >> at scale, especially tools and social structures for supporting struggling >> students. Before UC Berkeley, he was born, raised, and went to college in >> Texas where it was very hot and there were many terrible bugs. Prior to his >> time in the Lone Star State, he was a dispersion of random molecules, >> unassembled into any greater being. >> ___ >> change mailing list >> change@change.washington.edu >> https://changemm.cs.washington.edu/mailman/listinfo/change >> > ___ > change mailing list > change@change.washington.edu > https://changemm.cs.washington.edu/mailman/listinfo/change > ___ change mailing list change@change.washington.edu https://changemm.cs.washington.edu/mailman/listinfo/change
Re: [change] Special Change Seminar **Wednesday 10:30-11:30**
Reminder that this will begin in 5 minutes, in CSE2-371! On Mon, Dec 2, 2019 at 8:03 PM Matthew Johnson wrote: > Hello! > > We will have Josh Hug from UC Berkeley joining us this week for a special > change seminar on Wednesday at 10:30 in CSE2-371. (There will not be a > speaker on Tuesday.) > > We hope to see you all there, but if you can’t make it we will send out a > livestream link before the talk on Wednesday as well! > > *Embedding Social Impact Awareness into Introductory CS Education* > > *Abstract* > Computer science and data science education provide our students with > tremendous power and responsibility immediately after graduation. Many of > our graduates find themselves embedded in organizations like Facebook, > Google, and Amazon that shape the destinies of billions of people around > the world. As university instructors, we do a great job providing the > technical foundation for our students' future careers, but I believe that > we could do a much better job helping students chart the broader narrative > arcs of their lives. > > Berkeley has long had a dedicated Social Implications of Computing Course. > In this class, we discuss the impacts of computing on all aspects of > society, and have students discuss and reflect on some of the big ethical > challenges faced by technical workers and entrepreneurs, e.g. free policies > on social media platforms. Recently, we have begun to integrate such bigger > picture discussions into our technical coursework. In this talk, I will > describe these efforts to integrate professional development, career goal > reflection, and ethics into three core technical courses in UC Berkeley's > CS and Data Science Majors, as well as the challenges we've faced along the > way. > > *Bio* > Josh Hug is an Associate Teaching Professor in Computer Science at UC > Berkeley. He completed his PhD in EECS at UC Berkeley in 2011, with a > primary focus on reverse engineering of bacterial signal processing systems > and bacterial decision making and a minor focus in education. After > Berkeley, he taught at Princeton from 2011-2014, where he helped develop > the Princeton Algorithms MOOC on Coursera. He joined the Berkeley EECS > faculty in 2014. He most frequently teaches Data Structures, Data Science, > and the Social Implications of Computing, and is the Equity and Inclusion > Officer for CS undergraduates. His primary research interest is in learning > at scale, especially tools and social structures for supporting struggling > students. Before UC Berkeley, he was born, raised, and went to college in > Texas where it was very hot and there were many terrible bugs. Prior to his > time in the Lone Star State, he was a dispersion of random molecules, > unassembled into any greater being. > ___ > change mailing list > change@change.washington.edu > https://changemm.cs.washington.edu/mailman/listinfo/change > ___ change mailing list change@change.washington.edu https://changemm.cs.washington.edu/mailman/listinfo/change
[change] Special Change Seminar **Wednesday 10:30-11:30**
Hello! We will have Josh Hug from UC Berkeley joining us this week for a special change seminar on Wednesday at 10:30 in CSE2-371. (There will not be a speaker on Tuesday.) We hope to see you all there, but if you can’t make it we will send out a livestream link before the talk on Wednesday as well! *Embedding Social Impact Awareness into Introductory CS Education* *Abstract* Computer science and data science education provide our students with tremendous power and responsibility immediately after graduation. Many of our graduates find themselves embedded in organizations like Facebook, Google, and Amazon that shape the destinies of billions of people around the world. As university instructors, we do a great job providing the technical foundation for our students' future careers, but I believe that we could do a much better job helping students chart the broader narrative arcs of their lives. Berkeley has long had a dedicated Social Implications of Computing Course. In this class, we discuss the impacts of computing on all aspects of society, and have students discuss and reflect on some of the big ethical challenges faced by technical workers and entrepreneurs, e.g. free policies on social media platforms. Recently, we have begun to integrate such bigger picture discussions into our technical coursework. In this talk, I will describe these efforts to integrate professional development, career goal reflection, and ethics into three core technical courses in UC Berkeley's CS and Data Science Majors, as well as the challenges we've faced along the way. *Bio* Josh Hug is an Associate Teaching Professor in Computer Science at UC Berkeley. He completed his PhD in EECS at UC Berkeley in 2011, with a primary focus on reverse engineering of bacterial signal processing systems and bacterial decision making and a minor focus in education. After Berkeley, he taught at Princeton from 2011-2014, where he helped develop the Princeton Algorithms MOOC on Coursera. He joined the Berkeley EECS faculty in 2014. He most frequently teaches Data Structures, Data Science, and the Social Implications of Computing, and is the Equity and Inclusion Officer for CS undergraduates. His primary research interest is in learning at scale, especially tools and social structures for supporting struggling students. Before UC Berkeley, he was born, raised, and went to college in Texas where it was very hot and there were many terrible bugs. Prior to his time in the Lone Star State, he was a dispersion of random molecules, unassembled into any greater being. ___ change mailing list change@change.washington.edu https://changemm.cs.washington.edu/mailman/listinfo/change