EduHPC 2015: WORKSHOP ON EDUCATION FOR HIGH-PERFORMANCE COMPUTING
Mon, Nov 16, 2015
http://www.cs.gsu.edu/~tcpp/
Held in conjunction with SC-15: The International Conference on High
Performance Computing, Networking, Storage, and Analysis
Nov 15-20, 2015 <http://sc15.supercomputing.
CALL FOR PAPERS
Parallel and Distributed Computing (PDC) along with High Performance
Computing (HPC) has become pervasive, from supercomputers and server
farms containing multicore CPUs and GPUs, to individual PCs, laptops,
and mobile devices. Even casual users of computers depend on parallel
processing nowadays. It is now necessary for every computer user -and
especially every programmer -to understand how parallelism and
distributed computing affect problem solving. It is now essential to
impart a range of PDC and HPC knowledge and skills at various levels
within the educational fabric woven by Computer Science (CS), Computer
Engineering (CE), and related computational curricula. Companies and
laboratories need people with these skills and are finding that they
must do extensive on-the-job training. However, rapid changes in
hardware platforms, languages, programming environments, and advances
in research increasingly challenge educators to decide what to teach
and how to teach it, in order to prepare students for careers that are
increasingly likely to involve PDC.
This workshop invites unpublished manuscripts from academia, industry,
and government laboratories on topics pertaining to the needs and
approaches for augmenting undergraduate and graduate education in
Computer Science and Engineering, Computational Science, and
computational courses for STEM and business disciplines with PDC and
high performance computing (HPC) concepts.
The workshop is particularly dedicated to bringing together
stakeholders from industry (both hardware vendors and employers),
government labs, funding agencies, and academia in the context of
SC-15, so that each can hear the challenges faced by the others, can
learn the various approaches to these challenges, and can generally
have opportunities to exchange ideas and brainstorm solutions. In
addition to contributed talks, this workshop will feature panels,
special sessions, and invited talks on opportunities for
collaboration, resource sharing, educator training, internships, and
other means of increasing cross-fertilization between industry,
government, and academia, without "eating the seed corn." Proposals
for panels and special sessions are also welcome.
This effort is in coordination with the NSF/TCPP curriculum initiative
on Parallel and Distributed Computing and the Center for Parallel and
Distributed Computing Curriculum Development and Educational Resources
(CDER).
TOPICS OF INTEREST include, but are not limited to:
1. Pedagogical issues in incorporating PDC and HPC in undergraduate
1. Pedagogical issues in incorporating PDC and HPC in undergraduate
and graduate education, especially in core courses
2. Novel ways of teaching PDC and HPC topics
3. Experience with incorporating PDC and HPC topics into core CS/CE
courses
4. Pedagogical tools, programming environments, infrastructures,
5. Employers' experiences with and expectation of the level of PDC and
HPC proficiency among new graduates
6. Education resources based on higher level programming languages
such as PGAS, X10, Chapel, Haskell, Python and Cilk, and emerging
environments such as CUDA, OpenCL, OpenACC, and Hadoop
7. Parallel and distributed models of programming/computation suitable
for teaching, learning and workforce development.
SUBMISSION GUIDELINES:
PAPERS: Authors are asked to submit 6-8 page papers in pdf format
through the EasyChair submission site at
<https://easychair.org/
choosing its "Paper" track. Submissions should be formatted as
single-spaced double-column pages using 10-point size font on 8.5x11
inch pages (IEEE conference style), including figures, tables, and
references. See style templates available from IEEE for details. Paper
will be published in the conference workshop proceedings.
IMPORTANT DATES:
September 7, 2015: Paper submission deadline (extended)
Sept 25, 2015: Author notification
Oct 9, 2015: Camera-ready paper deadline
PANELS: Prospective organizers are asked to submit a proposal in PDF
format through the EasyChair submission site at
<https://easychair.org/
its "Panel" track. Upload a single PDF file that describes the panel,
which may include such information as description of the panel topic
or position statements by the panelists. You must convince us that the
panel will truly be an interactive session and not a series of
presentations. Explain why the panel will attract a good audience and
why the audience will feel that the panel was beneficial. Suggested
length for this proposal is 1-2 pages. Use font and style as for
papers noted earlier.
SPECIAL SESSIONS: A session will consist of 2-3 talks on a coherent
theme spanning about an hour. Organizers are asked to submit a
proposal in pdf format through the EasyChair submission site at
<https://easychair.org/
its "Special Session" track. Use font and style as for papers
noted earlier. Upload a single PDF file (1-2 pages) that describes the
session: (i) session goals -specifically how attendees will benefit,
(ii) target audience, (iii) why the topic is relevant to workshop and
SC attendees, (iv) general description of session content, and (v)
links to resume or curriculum vitae for each presenter.
IMPORTANT DATES:
Sept 21, 2015: Proposal for panels or special sessions submission deadline
Oct 16, 2015: Notifications for panels/special sessions
ORGANIZATION:
Workshop Chair:
Sushil K. Prasad, Georgia State University
Program Chair:
Ioana Banicescu, Mississippi State University
Proceedings Chair:
Satish Puri, Georgia State University
Program Committee:
Henri Bal, Vrije Universiteit
Martina Barnas, Indiana University Bloomington
Virendra Bhavsar, University of New Brunswick
Andrey Brito, Universidade Federal de Campina Grande
Scott Buck, Intel
David Bunde, Knox College
Florina Ciorba, University of Basel
Debzani Deb, Winston-Salem State University
Akshaye Dhawan, Ursinus College
Diana Franklin, UC Santa Barbara
Eric Freudenthal, University of Texas at El Paso
Victor Gergel, Nizhni Novgorod State University
Sheikh Ghafoor, Tennessee Tech
Nasser Giacaman, The University of Auckland
Domingo Gimenez, University of Murcia
Ganesh Gopalakrishnan, University of Utah
Ajay Gupta, Western Michigan University
David Juedes, Ohio University
David Kaeli, Northeastern University
Ananth Kalyanaraman, Washington State University
Helen Karatza, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki
Karen Karavanic, Portland State University
George Karypis, University of Minnesota
Kishore Kothapalli, Indian Institute of Information Technology Hyderabad
Alexey Lastovetsky, University College Dublin
Andrew Lumsdaine, Indiana University
Henry Neeman, University of Oklahoma
Brandeis Marshall, Spelman College
Edusmildo Orozco, University of Puerto Rico
Peter Pacheco, University of San Francisco
Manish Parashar, Rutgers University
Sathya Peri, Indian Institute of Technology Hyderabad
Cynthia Phillips, Sandia National Laboratories
Thomas Rauber, University Bayreuth
Noemi Rodriguez, PUC-Rio de Janeiro
Gudula Ruenger, Chemnitz University of Technology
Erik Saule, University of North Carolina at Charlotte
Chandra Sekharan, Loyola University Chicago
Jawwad Shamsi, FAST National University
Chi Shen, Kentucky State University
Suzanne Shontz, University of Kansas
Rudrapatna Shyamasundar, Tata Institute of Fundamental Research
Leonel Sousa, Universidade de Lisboa
Srishti Srivastava, University of Southern Indiana
Michelle Strout, Arizona State University
Nitin Sukhija, Mississippi State University
Violet Syrotiuk, Arizona State University
Michela Taufer, University of Delaware
Dominique Thiebaut, Smith College
Denis Trystram, Grenoble Institute of Technology
Susan Wang, Mills College
Michael Wrinn, Intel
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