Cause for Concern?
Americans Are Scarce In Top Tech Contest

By Lee Gomes
Wall Street Journal

May 10, 2006; Page B1

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB114721319725548216.html?mod=technology_featured_stories_hs


The results have been carefully tabulated by a computer and, thus, are 
beyond dispute: Of the 48 best computer programmers in the world, only four 
of them are Americans. But what that bit of data says about the state of 
the U.S. education system is open to debate.

Back in February, I wrote about a computer-programming competition run by 
an outfit called TopCoder. That event was part of the run-up to the global 
finals held last week in Las Vegas. If you have trouble putting "computer 
programming" and "spectator sport" in the same sentence, you haven't been 
to one of these contests. From the gasps, moans and cheers as the audience 
watched the scoreboard tracking the contestants, you'd have thought you 
were at a World Cup match.

As noted in February, these competitions were dominated at their start in 
2001 by Americans, but that's no longer the case -- not by a long shot. In 
fact, of the four Americans who won the top seats out of 4,500 contestants, 
two were brothers: Po-Shen Loh, 23, a graduate student in math at Princeton 
University, and his 21-year-old sibling, Po-Ru, now an undergraduate at 
CalTech. Both were born in the Midwest of parents who had emigrated to the 
U.S. from Singapore; their father is a professor of statistics at the 
University of Wisconsin at Madison.

By contrast, there were eight from Russia, and four each from Norway and 
China. The biggest delegation -- 11 -- came from Poland.

So, is all this more evidence of a sad decline in American education and 
competitiveness?

Surprisingly, the Eastern Europeans don't seem to think so. Poland's 
Krzysztof Duleba, 22, explained that in countries like his own, there are 
so few economic opportunities for students that competitions like these are 
their one chance to participate in the global economy. Some of the Eastern 
Europeans even seemed slightly embarrassed by their over-representation, 
saying it isn't evidence of any superior schooling or talent so much as an 
indicator of how much they have to prove.

Much of Poland's abundant interest in coding contests can be traced to 
Tomasz Czajka, who as a multiple TopCoder champion has won more than 
$100,000 in prize money since the competition began. That has made him 
something of a national hero back home, and other students have been eager 
to follow suit.

Each round of competition had three problems: easy, medium and hard. The 
hard problem of the final round required contestants to figure out the most 
efficient way of using computer cable to connect different nodes in a network.

Naturally, the actual problem was vastly more complicated than that 
description makes it seem. John Dethridge, an Australian contestant, said 
the average computer-science undergraduate might not be able to solve that 
third problem at all, much less do so in the 90 minutes the contestants had 
to tackle all three.

The final round involved eight contestants culled during the first two days 
of competition. None of the Americans made the final cut; instead, there 
were two Russians, two Poles, and coders from Australia, China, Japan and 
Slovakia. One of the Russians, Petr Mitrichev, 21, won, taking home $20,000 
for his efforts.

Others attending the contest cautioned against reaching any sky-is-falling 
conclusions about the relative lack of success of Americans.

Ken Vogel, a former TopCoder contestant who was at the event recruiting for 
his current employer, UBS, noted that in the real world, programmers need 
many other skills in addition to the ability to solve quickly some discrete 
and entirely artificial problems. These include, he said, thinking about 
the big picture, working well in teams, and anticipating the sorts of 
things that users of computers and computer software might actually want.

It's not at all clear that any of the famous U.S. technology entrepreneurs 
of the past several decades would have done particularly well at such a 
contest.

Still, when contemplating how out of place some of the strongly disciplined 
Russian or Polish programmers would be among American college students, who 
all too often become either slackers or salary-obsessed careerists out for 
the easy score, it's hard not to be depressed.

American contestant Po-Shen Loh recalled recently happening upon an 
afternoon TV cartoon aimed at toddlers, in which a stereotypically brainy 
student was being teased by his classmates. "They were making fun of the 
smart one," he sighed. "If this is what American kids are watching even 
before they know any better, it can't help but affect them later on."

The TopCoder company pays for these events in part by attracting sponsors 
who pony up for the privilege of recruiting from among the contestants. One 
of the sponsors was the National Security Agency, which, as keeper of 
America's state secrets, isn't allowed to hire noncitizens. That makes it 
one of the few employers anywhere who can't participate in the 
globalization of the computer industry that the contest represents.

The other sponsors, however, were all smiles.


================================
George Antunes, Political Science Dept
University of Houston; Houston, TX 77204
Voice: 713-743-3923  Fax: 713-743-3927
antunes at uh dot edu



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