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Department of Computer Science. Engineering Council Meeting April 15, 2004 Henning Schulzrinne. Overview. State of the Department enrollment, new faculty Academic program reform Research Computing facilities Student life Visibility Alumni outreach Improvements in administration
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Department of Computer Science Engineering Council Meeting April 15, 2004 Henning Schulzrinne
Overview • State of the Department • enrollment, new faculty • Academic program reform • Research • Computing facilities • Student life • Visibility • Alumni outreach • Improvements in administration • Challenges
RESEARCH Interacting with Humans (7) Interacting with the Physical World (9) Making Sense of Data (9) Systems (10) Computer Science Theory (7) Designing Digital Systems (3)
Enrollments • 183 MS students • 113 PhD students • 427 PhD applications for Fall 2004 • Undergraduate classes (approximate): • (only counting seniors) • SEAS: 120 • CC: 30 • General Studies: 20 • CC contrentrators: 20 • Computer engineering: 50 • Has been relatively stable, despite decreases outside Columbia
Student life • Attempts at improving feeling of departmental cohesion • Very active ACM and WICS (women in Computer Science) organizations • Lounge as central social hub and “bump space” • projector for impromptu meetings and presentations • coffee hour • movie club • but distribution across two buildings • Paula Ryan organizing social events for undergraduates and MS students
Outreach and visibility • Newsletter (CS@CU) twice a year • mailed to top-25 CS faculty, chairs, etc. • Announcements of new faculty hires sent (card) • Mailing list for events and accomplishments
Alumni • Working on new website for alumni • job listings • contact and searching • Friendster/Orkut-style social networking • alice@alum.cs. • Outreach for 25th anniversary celebration
Administrative improvements • Common data store and web interface for departmental management • MICE • Now handling all graduate student and faculty applications in-house • in-house development • some teething pains, but generally well received
Challenges • High student cost • Challenges for Computer Science in general: • external perception of field and career prospects • fewer Asian graduate applicants (visa issues)
Statistics: PhD Student Cost (2000) Princeton $46,870Columbia 45,724Yale 40,920Penn 40,617Chicago 39,792MIT 39,726Cornell 35,930JHU 34,235Stanford 31,932Brown 27,812Rochester 27,115Dartmouth 26,590