Contact Info

Join our email discussion list at PS CSTA Google Group.
Contact us via email at csta.pugetsound at gmail.com.
View our meeting calendar at PS CSTA Google Calendar.
Teachers can join CSTA for FREE as individual members.

Tuesday, January 14, 2014

STEM Out! 2014, Feb 8 from 9:45am-2:30pm

PSCSTA is hosting the 5th annual STEM Out! Girl's Event on Saturday, February 8, 2014 from 9:45am-2:30pm, sponsored and led by Amazon.com's Women in Engineering.

This event is to encourage girls from grades 7-12 to explore Science, Technology, Engineering, and Math careers! It's a FREE event and more information/registration can be found here:

Please help us spread the word and encourage your girls to participate!!

Download a PDF flyer by clicking: Stem Out 2014 Flyer.

Sunday, January 5, 2014

Next meeting: Sat, 1/11 : APCS A Labs

Starting in the 2014-2015 school year, AP CS A will no longer include a case study such as Gridworld.  Instead, teachers will be responsible for including a significant lab component in their courses but students will not be tested on their knowledge of specific pieces of code.  The College Board is in the process of developing three sample labs.

Join us to discuss the implications of the lab requirement, to look over the provided samples and to try some of the suggested exercises for yourself.

We will be meeting in room 203 on the 2nd floor.
Two clock hours will be provided for the workshop portion.

Monday, December 16, 2013

Paul Allen Computing Challenge

Kate Starbird, a professor in the UW Human Centered Design and Engineering department, gave a terrific keynote on "data science" at last Saturday's contest.  At the end of her talk, she announced the Paul Allen Computing Challenge.  This exciting challenge will act as a bridge between our December and April contests.  Students will analyze real Twitter data related to Cyclone Phailin which hit India in mid-October 2013.  Participants who complete the challenge will receive great prizes including a Kindle pre-loaded with Paul Allen’s Memoir Idea Man: A Memoir by the Co-founder of Microsoft.

Please post this flyer in your classrooms and encourage your students to participate!

We encourage students to involve their friends who are not currently taking CS courses -- most of the challenges in Part 1 of the challenge can be completed with Excel or other non-programming tools.

Contest information and registration details can be found here.  The PACC is organized by a team of local groups that work with data science led by the Living Computer Museum and the PSCSTA.  Questions?  E-mail Justin Spielmann, Living Computer Museum Education Coordinator at justinS@ livingcomputermuseum.org

Sunday, December 15, 2013

December 2013 Contest Results

246 students in 91 teams representing 24 schools joined us on Saturday, December 14th for a programming competition jointly hosted with UW CSE's DawgBytes program!  The event was generously sponsored by Microsoft.

Dozens of teachers and industry volunteers made this event possible.  All of your contributions were invaluable to making this event a success.  Thank you!

Congratulations to all of our participants!  Please share the results and pictures with your students.

Top represented schools were Kamiak and Issaquah with 11 teams each.

Download the contest materials zip file for the contest packet and sample data.

Wednesday, November 6, 2013

December 14th Programming Contest Registration Open

Registration is now open for the December 14th programming contest!  See the programming contests page for the registration form and more details.

The event, generously sponsored by TEALS and Microsoft, will take place at the University of Washington Paul Allen Center for Computer Science & Engineering.  Check-in starts at 8:30am and the award ceremony will finish at around 2:30pm.  Students will solve programming problems in teams of 3 using the programming language of their choice.  They will also hear a brief talk by UW professor Kate Starbird.

The registration cost is $30 which includes lunch and snacks.  Need-based scholarships are available.

Registration closes when we reach 85 teams or on 12/9, whichever comes first.

Flyer

Saturday, November 2, 2013

Next PSCSTA Meeting Sat, 11/16: Nifty Lessons

Resources/Notes:

This month’s meeting is about Nifty Lessons — lessons that you think teach a CS or CS-related concept and actively engage students.  WE NEED YOU to make this session a success.  We are looking for volunteers to share a nifty lesson.  Some topic suggestions are:
  • A cool Java program you build with the class in an AP-type course (examples: ball falling or roulette programs from CSE 142 or using Facebook API in 143)
  • A CS Unplugged mini-lesson (it could be straight from CS Unplugged -- seeing it done is different from reading about it!)
  • Something on an advanced topic like software engineering or HCI (design exercise)
  • Something from a CS Principles type of course
  • A fun activity that's peripherally related to CS (puzzles, ballparking, rubic's cubes)
Two clock hours will be provided for the workshop portion.
Contact Greg Kilpatrick if you are interested in sharing something nifty! 

Monday, October 14, 2013

Next meeting: Sat, 10/19 : Physical Computing Lab

Edit: workshop notes and resources posted.

Next PSCSTA Meeting: 
  • Topic: Physical Computing Lab with Arduino hosted by Andy Davidson
  • Date: Saturday, October 19, 2013
    10 am - 12 n followed by socializing and networking 12 − 1 pm
  • Place: UW, Sieg Hall, Room 233 (Map)
This month’s meeting is about physical computing — the blending of computer software and electronics hardware to create interactive systems. We’ll explore the Arduino platform, a small, open-source, inexpensive but powerful micro-controller that is used by artists, designers, engineers, hobbyists, and students for prototyping many different kinds of interactive systems and environments.

No prior electronics experience is necessary, and novice as well as expert programmers should find something fun and interesting. In a hands-on session, you’ll learn to create basic Arduino applications and see how it might be used in K-12 environments. I’ll have some beginner as well as advanced projects to work on.

PLEASE RSVP: If you intend to participate, please RSVP to adavid7@uw.edu. Since this workshop involves hardware, I want to make sure I have enough systems for everyone. Please bring your own laptop to use and (if you have time) download and install the Arduino software on it before the workshop (it’s free!).

LOCATION: Note that we are NOT meeting in the usual location this month, but will be in Sieg Hall, which is very close to the CSE building.


Two clock hours will be provided for the workshop portion.