Introduction to the Education Center on Computational Science & Engineering


CSU Math & Computer Science Chairs
Nov. 14, 1997
SDSU Faculty/Staff Center, 11am

Enhancing Undergraduate Curricula with High Performance Computing Tools and Technologies for the California State University System and the National Education Community

Come visit us Under the Dome - Library Addition #73 - Opening day was October 1, 1997

National Science Foundation's Division of Advanced Scientific Computing made five year awards supporting two High Performance Computing (HPC) Centers in San Diego (www.npaci.edu) and Champaign-Urbana (alliance.ncsa.uiuc.edu), to build the national infrastructure in HPC through partnerships. NSF also supports two HPC Centers in Pittsburgh and Cornell as they "ramp down" their service to the national community and transition their users, as appropriate, to San Diego and/or Champaign-Urbana.

Brief Introduction, a basis for follow on discussions

Kris Stewart

What is the mission of the EC/CSE?
Foster the incorporation of high performance research tools for scientific investigation into the undergraduate curriculum to better prepare learners for post-Baccalaureate activities in research and problem solving using/DD>
  • collaborative, interdisciplinary teams,
  • sophisticated computer tools and
  • effective communication among the team members and with others
SDSU Activities - Spring Semester 1998
Overview of NPACI
Ilya and I will travel to San Jose next week to attend SC97: High Performance Networking and Computing (Supercomputing '97) and we'd like to know your interests and needs better since many NPACI partners will also be there.
SDSC Gather Scatter www.sdsc.edu/GatherScatter online signup form to get bi-monthly hard copy
Large Data Sets
MOU between SDSC and SDSU (with Eric Frost) for data archiving - just need fast network now (vBNS?)

Ilya Zaslavsky, the "Virtual Professor"

        also: experiments with VRML, query interfaces, spatio-temporal simulation modeling, etc.

How can the faculty become involved?

The Education Center staff (Dr. Kris Stewart, Dr. Ilya Zaslavsky and Ms. Dolores Candelario) have prepared descriptions of the opportunities that SDSC and the NPACI offer to the nation, with a focus on identifying opportunities to enhance undergraduate education.

Computer Time at SDSC

Computer time is available from SDSC from the remaining Block Grant of time on the Cray C90 (vector supercomputer) and Cray T3E (parallel supercomputer). This can be obtained by submitting a short application (www.rohan.sdsu.edu/0520Cray.pdf) designed for start-up, investigations (typically 5 hours of Cray C90 time).

October 1 signaled the start of NPACI and no new time will be allocated to the SDSU Block Grant. NPACI Resources are allocated quarterly. Education applications are essentially a slam dunk and research applications are peer-review. A first time, 50 hour allocation, can be obtained through the expedited review process, submitted anytime.

Examples of collaborations already formed:

EC/CSE is client in ET 644 Instructional Design course (Roxanna Springer & Lance Larson)
National Endowment for the Humanities proposal with Dr. Bob Hoffman (Ed Tech)
Research project using the Virtual Reality Modeling Language (VRML) to simulate a California mission so that 4th grade students become doscens of the mission and conduct virtual tours. This provides a context and motivation for one of the required curricular topics in California Primiary Schools and uses VRML. SDSC hosts the national repository for VRML.
vBNS proposal participatation by SDSU within the CSU
CS 575 Supercomputing for the Sciences
Using Cray T90, Cray T3E, Berkeley NOW, Dec Alpha Farm from NPACI. This course will be taught as a collaborative learning experiment to not only introduce students to the tools and technologies at SDSC, but also to how science is done now in collaborative teams. If you have small projects that you can share for use in this course, this will make a more realistic experience for our students. I do ask the projects be small, since we are focussing on learning how to effectively use high performance computers, at the undergraduate level.
Integrated, Experimental Curriculum Committee (SDSU campus)
Supercomputer Teacher Enhancement Program (STEP)
Begun with NSF funding to UCSD Extension in 1992, the participants are now sponsored by the EC/CSE for continued access to the SDSC for follow-on work through SWAPS and California Science Program.
Maryland Virtual Highschool in Science & Mathematics

What can the EC/CSE do for you?

EC/CSE staff gathers information on NPACI through attending workshops, conferences and national meetings and disseminates this through the EC/CSE home page and the Education Laboratory - #73 Library Addition, SDSU.

Travel funds are available to allow the Ed. Center staff to travel to CSU campuses to make focussed presentations to your interested faculty. We would need input from you on the interests to allow the Ed. Center staff to research the possible tools, technologies and projects from the National Partnership on Advanced Computing Infrastructure and the San Diego Supercomputer that are most likely to fit into your undergraduate curricula. Much of this initial planning can be accomplish through electronic mail and desktop video teleconferencing.

Supercomputing and Undergraduate Education (SUE)

Workshops prepared and presented at SDSC by Stewart in Summer1991 and summer 92 to share materials developed for CS 575 Supercomputing for the Sciences course.

July 1991 - First SUE Workshop/CSU Faculty

Dr. Bruce Hillam, Chair, Computer Science, Cal Poly Pomona
Dr. Russell Cummings, Aero. Eng., Cal Poly SLO
Dr. Russell Tice, Chemistry, Cal Poly SLO
Dr. Edward Lamie, Chair, Computer Science, CSU Stanislaus
Dr. Elisheva Goldstein, Chemistry, Cal Poly Pomona
Dr. James Kho, Computer Science, CSU Sacramento
Dr. John Youssefi, Comptuer Science, CSU Bakersfield
Dr. Don Tanner, Info Systems/Computing, San Jose State
Dr. Larry Kroll, Computer Science, San Francisco State
Dr. S. Krishnamurthy, Mech. Eng., CSU Fullerton
Dr. Paul Wellin, Mathematics, Sonoma State
Dr. Kay Zemoudeh, Computer Science, CSU San Bernardino
Dr. V. Katkanant, Physics, CSU Fresno

Seond SUE July 1992 Workshop - National Participation

Dr. Abdul-Qayyum Masud Khaliq, Dept. Mathematics, Western Illinois University
Dr. Phillip Heller, Northest Missouri State University, Dept. of Computer Science/Information Systems
Dr. Robert F. Hodson, Christopher Newport College, Dept. Physics & Computer Science
Dr. Marcin Paprzycki, U. Texas Permian Basin, Dept. Mathematics and Computer Science
Dr. George Miel, U. Nevada, Dept. Mathematical Sciences
Dr. Yu Song, Indiana University at South Bend, Dept. Mathematics and Comptuer Sciences
Dr. John Avila, San Jose State University, Dept. Mathematics and Computer Sciences
Dr. Abdulkader Barbir, West Carolina University, Dept. Mathematics adn Computer Sciences
Dr. Arthur P. Leccese, Kenyon College, Psychology Dept.
Dr. Maria Calzada, Loyola University, Mathematical Sciences Dept.
Dr. Chenyi Hu, University of Houston-Downtown, Applied Mathematical Sciences
Dr. Randall H. Brown, Luther College, Dept. Physics
Dr. Jim Northrup, Colby College, Dept. Mathematics and Computer Science
Dr. Seymour Goodman, Dept. Computer Science, Queens College of CUNY
Dr. David H. Cook, Dept. Physics, Lawrence University
Dr. Peter Tonellato, Dept. Math, Statistics, Computer Science, Marquette University
Dr. Darrah Chavey, Dept. Math and Computer Science, Beloit College
Dr. Noel Petit, Dept. Computer Science, Augsburg College
Dr. Michael Hvidsten, Dept. Math and Computer Science, Gustavus Adolphus College
Dr. Henry V. Jakubowski, Dept. Chemistry, St. Johns' University

This presentation is available online to easily pursue the links from www.edcenter.sdsu.edu/presentations/csuchairs1197.html

Dr. Kris Stewart (stewart@sdsu.edu), Director
Dr. Ilya Zaslavsky, GIS Staff Scientist of the
Education Center on Computational Science & Engineering, located at
San Diego State University a Partnership Activity of the 
National Partnership for Advanced Computing Infrastructure (NPACI) for the 
California State University using resources from the NPACI partnership and its Leading Edge Site, the 
San Diego Supercomputer Center