91Ʒ Professors Awarded $1 Million Grant from National Science Foundation to Develop New Approach for Teaching Computer Science in High Schools
Computing in Secondary Schools Program Will Stress Fundamentals
CLEVELAND – A team of professors led by Dr. Nigamanth Sridhar of 91Ʒ has been awarded a $1 million grant from the National Science Foundation to train teachers to teach a new standardized AP course in computer science in high schools.
“We need a better way of educating students at the high-school level about computing,” said Dr. Sridhar, associate professor in 91Ʒ’s Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering. “The technology is always changing, but the core concepts do not change. Our program focuses on the fundamentals, so teachers and students will gain a firm foundation in computer science.”
Dr. Sridhar’s collaborators on the Computing in Secondary Schools (CISS) project are 91Ʒ faculty members Dr. Santosh Misra, chair of 91Ʒ’s Department of Computer and Information Science; Dr. Debbie Jackson, associate professor of STEM teacher education; and Dr. Karla Hamlen, assistant professor of educational research. The team also includes Dr. Beth Simon of the University of California, San Diego.
The project is part of the national CS10K initiative, a joint effort by the NSF and the U.S. Department of Education to train 10,000 computer science teachers in 10,000 high schools across the United States.
The CISS team will provide professional development to teachers from across Ohio (via the Ohio STEM Learning Network), who will hone the skills required to teach the new AP Computer Science Principles course, which Dr. Simon helped to design. The first cohort of teachers will attend an introductory workshop in the summer of 2014, and will receive follow-up support throughout the year. The project also will create an online course on computer science education.
For computer science teachers in secondary schools, the team plans to offer the only licensure pathway in Ohio through the nationally recognized 91ƷTeach program, create a replicable model for training using an online network and establish mentoring programs with a focus on increasing participation among women and minorities.
The ultimate goal is to nurture educators who will be well-prepared to teach high-school students the fundamentals of computer science.
The CISS program was developed with the support of 91Ʒ’s Fenn College of Engineering, College of Education and Human Services and Monte Ahuja College of Business, as well as 91Ʒ’s Office of Research. Dr. Gina Weisblat assisted with the proposal.