Learning from having achievements plummet

August 10, 2008

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In one of the first classes of software engineering for the semester we get students to do an “egg and straws”. The challenge is to build a structure to prevent an egg breaking when dropped to concrete from shoulder height. The only resources available are 6 drinking straws and 20cm of tape. I have a […]

Software Engineering meets Living Campus

August 10, 2008

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We’ve got two full streams of Software Engineering this year. We teach a brand of software engineering that attempts to integrate agile with structure: Agile development framework (link to emerging wikibook). As part of our drive to find opportunities to integrate sustainability into teaching, we’re giving the groups the challenge of developing an information infrastructure […]

Interacting but don’t expect to explore systems thinking

July 30, 2008

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The Exploratorium in San Fransico is a truly amazing place. I lost count of the interactive exhibits that were doing a fantastic job of engaging kids (and their adults) in science (click on image for slideshow of interactive exhibits). What surprised me though, is the almost complete lack of complex systems. With about five exceptions, […]

Working for the earth 5 til 9

July 29, 2008

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I swim regularly with a triathlete who is also a policeman. He works strange hours, some weeks he’s on days, others he calls in for swim on the way home in the early morning. These strange hours are because “crime never sleeps”. Something else that never sleeps is environmental and social degradation. The fight for […]

Slowly getting beyond green IT as new sex

July 23, 2008

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It is with mixed emotion that I read Stephen Bell’s (Computerworld) report of a panel at Radar08 last week. Followers of this blog will recognise my theme: Computing and IT underpins every sector of society as a pervasive and influential discipline with global impact. As a result, computing influences the environment and society either positively […]