Published June 9, 2020
The U.S. Department of Defense’s (DoD) Defense STEM Education Consortium (DESC) has awarded a one-year grant to the San Diego Supercomputer Center (SDSC) at UC San Diego and the UC San Diego Mathematics Project housed at the university’s Center for Research on Educational Equity, Assessment, and Teaching Excellence (CREATE), to introduce computing into high school math classrooms.
The DSEC Innovation Bloc grant, called ICAT through DM - short for Introducing Computing and Technology Through Discrete Math problem-solving - will fund a Summer Institute for regional high school mathematics teachers and a Summer Academy for military-connected, underserved, and underrepresented rising seniors.
Robert Sinkovits, director of SDSC’s scientific computing applications and lead for SDSC’s Education and Training program; and Osvaldo Soto, director of the UC San Diego Mathematics Project at CREATE, are the Principal Investigators for the grant.
The DSEC Innovation Bloc grant was awarded as part of a five-year, $75 million award by the DoD under which DSEC focuses on K-16 (kindergarten through college) STEM enrichment programs for military-connected and/or low-income students and educators, as well as workforce engagement, program evaluation, and public outreach efforts across the nation. The consortium is comprised of 18 organizations, includes UC San Diego CREATE, which serves as a program hub lead on the DSEC grant.
“UC San Diego CREATE is helping our campus to leverage its contacts and networks to support STEM learning for all students, particularly those from less advantaged backgrounds, to make use of learning opportunities funded by the DoD and its many STEM partners,” said Susan Yonezawa, associate director of CREATE and a co-director of the UC San Diego Math Project. “We’re pleased the DSEC Innovation Bloc grant, a collaboration between the UC San Diego Mathematics Project and SDSC, will bring crucial computer and mathematics skills and knowledge to military-connected, underserved, and underrepresented students in San Diego.”
The ICAT through DM’s Summer Institute professional development program for teachers and Summer Academy for students were slated to be held at SDSC, but because of COVID-19 restrictions the programs have been moved online. The online Summer Institute will be held June 22-July 2, 2020, for 20 teachers from the Oceanside Unified School District, San Diego Unified School District, San Marcos Unified School District and Sweetwater Union High School District. Teachers will explore Discrete Math content and be introduced to Python computer language through games of strategy, cryptography and counting techniques. The curriculum will focus on identifying the best conditions for using computing and technology to solve math problems (an example of Standard for Mathematical Practice #5: Use appropriate tools strategically).
The online Summer Academy, led by the Institute teachers, will be held the following week, July 6-10, 2020, for 24 military-connected, underserved, and underrepresented rising seniors from the teachers’ high schools.
“Computational and mathematical thinking are essential to the DoD workforce in nearly every domain, from climate simulations and aerodynamics to analyzing large volumes of text data and satellite imagery,” said Sinkovits. “Discrete mathematics is particularly important in areas as diverse as cryptography, logistics, communications networks and complex decision making.”
Mathematics is traditionally taught using a pencil-and-paper approach and often lacks a real-world context, frequently leading to a sense of alienation among middle and high school students along with missed opportunities to advance critical mathematical and computational ways of thinking, noted Sinkovits.
“Many of today’s real-world problems require mathematical solutions that can only be solved using computational techniques and resources and a strong understanding of key mathematical concepts backed with the power of technology to help students – as well as teachers – better connect empirical and deductive reasoning,” Soto said.
SDSC’s involvement with UC San Diego CREATE began when Sinkovits and SDSC Education Manager Ange Mason met Yonezawa to discuss ideas for SDSC’s summer program for teachers.
“One could say that Susan was our matchmaker,” said Sinkovits. “She suggested that we meet with Osvaldo from the UC San Diego Math Project, as well as Trang Vu, a veteran math teacher and one of the developers of the Discrete Math Pre-Collegiate Curriculum. Together, the ideas started flowing quickly for a proposal to DSEC to fund a discrete mathematics program for teachers and their students. We’re excited to be involved in this very worthwhile initiative.”
“As the project got underway, we were fortunate enough to recruit more outstanding teachers to help prepare for our summer activities: Tony Claudio, a computer science teacher from Sweetwater Union High School District, and Jorge Hernandez Leon, a math teacher from San Diego Unified School District,” said Soto.
About UC San Diego CREATE and the UC San Diego Mathematics Project
The Center for Research on Educational Equity, Assessment and Teaching Excellence (CREATE) at UC San Diego is an innovative education research center that supports and promotes diversity, excellence, and equity in education. CREATE actively links UC San Diego to the local K-20 community through college preparation and success programs, research and program evaluation, school improvement efforts, and educator professional learning.
Launched in fall 2018, the UC San Diego Mathematics Project is the newest of 20 California Mathematics Project sites supported by the State of California and administered by the University of California Office of the President. Housed at UC San Diego’s CREATE, The UC San Diego Mathematics Program joins Math for America San Diego and the San Diego Math Network in CREATE to expand the Center’s mathematics teacher professional development efforts.
About SDSC
The San Diego Supercomputer Center (SDSC) is a leader and pioneer in high-performance and data-intensive computing, providing cyberinfrastructure resources, services, and expertise to the national research community, academia, and industry. Located on the UC San Diego campus, SDSC supports hundreds of multidisciplinary programs spanning a wide variety of domains, from astrophysics and earth sciences to disease research and drug discovery. In late 2020 SDSC will launch its newest National Science Foundation-funded supercomputer, Expanse. At over twice the performance of Comet, Expanse supports SDSC’s theme of ‘Computing without Boundaries’ with a data-centric architecture, public cloud integration, and state-of-the art GPUs for incorporating experimental facilities and edge computing.
About DSEC
DSEC is a collaborative partnership of STEM-focused organizations dedicated to addressing and prioritizing our Nation’s STEM talent. DSEC aims to broaden STEM literacy and develop a diverse and agile workforce with the technical excellence to defend our Nation. Through strategic investment in STEM education and outreach activities, the effort will provide students with more exposure to educational and career opportunities, as well as DoD research. DSEC is led on behalf of DoD STEM by RTI International.
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