Description:
The CCSC Eastern Regional Conference is designed to promote the exchange of information among college personnel and K-12 educators concerned with computer use and education in the academic environment. It provides an affordable regional forum for the exchange of ideas and information concerning computing and computing curricula.
Description:
This Association is made up of those educators in institutions of higher education within the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania who are involved in courses or programs that are considered to be a part of Computer and/or Information Science.
Description:
CCSCNE is the northeastern region of the national Consortium for Computing Sciences in Colleges (CCSC). Started in 1996, CCSCNE is one of the largest regions of CCSC. CCSCNE brings together faculty, staff, and students from academic institutions throughout the Northeast for exchange of ideas and information concerning undergraduate computing curricula. This conference provides a regional forum for the exchange of information and ideas pertaining to the concerns of computing and computing curricula in a smaller academic environment. CCSCNE holds a refereed conference every Spring, also called CCSCNE. This conference draws participants from all over the northeast and eastern United States. The proceedings of the conference are published as an issue of the Journal of Computing Sciences in Colleges.
Description:
The Bucknell and Association for Computing Machinery (ACM) Spring Programming Contest where various students from various universities come to compete against one another. Last year there was 15 teams on site and five more teams playing from South Eastern University in China. Students solved problems in two divisions: Novice for students in their first two Computer Science classes and Expert for the rest of the students. There were eight teams in the Novice division this year: three from SEU, one from Bloomsburg University, and four from Bucknell. They worked on two logic problems and five programming problems. There were 12 teams in the Expert division: two from SEU, three from Susquehanna University, one from Pennsylvania College of Technology, one from Bloomsburg, and five from Bucknell. They worked on seven tough programming problems.