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Arnold L. Rosenberg

Abstraction in Education

Jeudi 4 Juillet 2019


Arnold L. (Arny) ROSENBERG is a Distinguished University Professor Emeritus at the University of Massachusetts. His career has included: full-time positions at IBM Research, Duke University, and the University of Massachusetts; part-time teaching at Brooklyn Polytechnic Institute (now Polytechicnic Institute of New York), New York University, and Yale University; research positions at Colorado State University and Northeastern University; and sabbatical visits at the University of Toronto, the Technion (as a Lady Davis Visiting Professor), and Universite Paris-Sud (as a Fulbright Senior Research Scholar). He is a Life Fellow of the IEEE, a Lifetime Fellow of the ACM, and a member of the Society of the Sigma Xi. He is the author/coauthor of more that 180 research publications; of three books: "Graph Separators, with Applications" (with Lenny Heath of Virgina Tech); \The Pillars of Computation Theory"; soon, "Understand Mathematics, Understand Computing" (with Denis Trystram of Universite Grenoble).

Réalisation technique : Antoine Orlandi | Tous droits réservés


It is said that if you give a person a fish, you feed him/her for a day. If you teach the person how to fish, you feed him/her for a lifetime.
This aphorism has been my roadmap, as a learner and a teacher.
Inspired by the aphorism, I strive to:

  • educate rather than train

  • abstract from concrete and immediate to fundamental and essential

* Inspire each student to become a mathematician or an informaticist, rather than just learn some mathematics or some informatics.
* Equipped with understanding of "why?" rather than just "how?" a student can confront new situations with courage and creativity.

  1. Stress the importance of data representation in computing.
    Different representations ==> dramatically different algorithms

  2. Study parallel computing via dependency dags, not programs.
    Know sources of concurrency ==> recognize related computations

  3. Understand logical complexity|e - eg., self-reference - in systems
    Recognize related structures in, e.g., linguisticslogicnumber theory

Document joint : abs-web.pdf

Date et Lieu

Jeudi 4 Juillet 2019 à 14h00
Amphithéâtre du bâtiment IMAG

Organisé par

L'équipe Keynote du LIG

Nicolas PELTIER
Renaud LACHAIZE
Dominique VAUFREYDAZ

Intervenant

Arnold L. ROSENBERG
Distinguished University Professor Emeritus University of Massachusetts

Submitted on February 8, 2021

Updated on February 8, 2021