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August 8, 2003
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SDSC Press Release
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SDSC Education Department Efforts Recognized
in SIGKids Awards
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An algebra tutorial designed by a San Diego high
school student and a mathematical game created by
a 4th grade math teacher in San Diego were
among five projects assisted or developed by the Educational
Technology Laboratory at the San Diego Supercomputer
Center (SDSC) that won awards at the 11th
annual "SIGKids" competition. The recognition
was made as part of SIGGRAPH, the annual national
graphics convention, which was held July 27–31
at the San Diego Convention Center and attended by
about 25,000 registrants. The juried SIGKids competition
was designed to recognize computer visualization projects
that promote the development of multisensory interactions,
multilingual formats, lifetime learning, and interdisciplinary
approaches.
Alan Luu, an 11th grader at the Preuss
School UCSD, a middle/high school on the UC San Diego
campus, won a $50 honorable mention award for his
interactive tutorial designed to teach students how
to solve basic algebraic equations. John Barta, a
math specialist at Balboa Elementary School, won a
$100 award of merit for creating a game called "Bowling
with Numbers." The Web-based game generates sets
of three random numbers, which students then use in
mathematical expressions they write themselves. Correct
answers are rewarded by pins being knocked down in
a bowling game when students' hit a "Knock 'em
Down!" button to check their answers. (Two Preuss
School UCSD students, Elvira Gonzalez and Marcos Leon,
translated the English version of the game into Spanish.)
SIGKids 2003 award-winners involving SDSC education
and visualization projects include:
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Computer Math Quiz, $50, Honorable Mention.
In this interactive Web-based tutorial by Preuss
School UCSD junior Alan Lu, students learn how to
solve basic algebraic equations. Lu's entry was
his class project in a multimedia course taught
at Preuss by Anne Bowen and Jason Wiskerchen, programmer
analysts in the SDSC Educational Technology Laboratory.
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Bowling with Numbers, $100, Award of Merit.
This bilingual math game designed by John Barta
teaches elementary students about order of operations.
The game was developed with the assistance of
Bowen. Barta designed it at SDSC during last year's
TeacherTECH, a two-week summer training program
offered by the SDSC Education Department to teach
teachers how use software tools and computing
technology in their classrooms.
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EnVision Explore Engage (E3): Computational
Science, $250, Special Award of Merit.
Computational Science is one of four modules in
the E3 educational series, a K-12 curriculum development
project that includes multi-media activities and
instructional materials. E3 is designed to bring
the research of the National Partnership for Advanced
Computational Infrastructure (NPACI) to the K-12
audience. Wiskerchen, Bowen, Apryl Bailey, Zack
Schumann, and Jon C. Meyer, all members and participants
of the SDSC Educational Technology Laboratory,
collaborated to produce the Computational Science
module.
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Colonia 10 de Mayo: A Community Collaborative,
$500, Best Spanish-Language Entry. In
partnership with the SDSC Education Department,
Wiskerchen and Cindy Santini, Web developers with
the Regional Workbench Consortium at UCSD, developed
interactive Web-based narratives that address
interlocking problems of environmental protection
and economic development in the San Diego-Tijuana
crossborder city-region. The narratives consist
of video and motion-graphic presentations with
audio and voice narration, close captioning, and
links to related topics.
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Chemystery, $500, Best Wide Age Appeal.
This playful, educational production based on
a "Guess what this molecule is?" approach
to teaching chemistry, was produced by Teresa
Larsen of the Foundation for Scientific Literacy
in La Jolla, CA, David Goodsell of The Scripps
Research Institute in La Jolla, and Meyer, a producer
in the Scientific Visualization Group at SDSC.
"These awards show the excellence of both the
training and educational programs at the Supercomputer
Center," said Rozeanne Stecker, director of the
SDSC Education Department. "In the case of John
Barta's award for his TeacherTECH project, it shows
that in a two-week course we can give skills to teachers
who otherwise know very little about information technology,
and these skills can enable them to develop an award-winning
piece of curriculum."
In his experience as a math specialist for elementary
students, Barta had encountered several children who
learned with great difficulty. He also observed that
nontraditional techniques often engaged the same students
and facilitated their learning. "John felt that
'alternate learners' would love the material he was
trying to present if it could be offered in an interactive
way," said Steckler. "And he was right."
The Colonia 10 de Mayo project met one of the SIGKids
competition's key goals of actively sharing of information
and technology with others involved in socially progressive
uses of advanced information systems. "It's not
your typical video presentation, because it has the
ability to link to our database to perform searches
in the middle of the presentation on such topics as
data on toxic wastes in the community," said
Wiskerchen. "It also reaches a broader audience
than most educational presentations by providing close-captioning
and language selection."
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