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Providing a supported online course on parallel computing

Published: 22 July 2013 Publication History

Abstract

Learning the principles of computational modeling and parallel computing requires more than a short workshop. Workshops generally run from a few hours to a few days and are therefore limited in the amount of material that can be covered. In addition, it is more difficult for participants to retain large amounts of new material under the time pressures of a workshop. Deeper understanding of such complex materials can come from more traditional academic courses. Yet, many institutions either lack the expertise or the curriculum flexibility to offer such courses. In the spring of 2013 we offered the equivalent of a full semester course entitled Applications of Parallel Computing as an open, online course in an effort to address these issues. The course was offered over a period of thirteen weeks using materials captured from the University of California Berkeley course CS267. Enrollment was initially limited to 345 students. Creating and implementing the course involved decisions in several areas: design of the instructional materials, creating an environment to run programming assignments, support mechanisms for the large number of students taking the course, and automatic grading of assignments. In this session, we will present a summary of the experience in addressing these questions along with an evaluation of the course outcomes.

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  • (2014)Architecting an autograder for parallel codeProceedings of the 2014 Annual Conference on Extreme Science and Engineering Discovery Environment10.1145/2616498.2616571(1-8)Online publication date: 13-Jul-2014
  • (2014)Development of undergraduate and graduate programs in computational scienceConcurrency and Computation: Practice & Experience10.1002/cpe.322726:13(2329-2335)Online publication date: 10-Sep-2014

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XSEDE '13: Proceedings of the Conference on Extreme Science and Engineering Discovery Environment: Gateway to Discovery
July 2013
433 pages
ISBN:9781450321709
DOI:10.1145/2484762
Permission to make digital or hard copies of part or all of this work for personal or classroom use is granted without fee provided that copies are not made or distributed for profit or commercial advantage and that copies bear this notice and the full citation on the first page. Copyrights for third-party components of this work must be honored. For all other uses, contact the Owner/Author.

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Association for Computing Machinery

New York, NY, United States

Publication History

Published: 22 July 2013

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Author Tags

  1. autograding
  2. high performance computing
  3. online learning
  4. parallel programming

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  • Research-article

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XSEDE '13

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Overall Acceptance Rate 129 of 190 submissions, 68%

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Cited By

View all
  • (2014)Architecting an autograder for parallel codeProceedings of the 2014 Annual Conference on Extreme Science and Engineering Discovery Environment10.1145/2616498.2616571(1-8)Online publication date: 13-Jul-2014
  • (2014)Development of undergraduate and graduate programs in computational scienceConcurrency and Computation: Practice & Experience10.1002/cpe.322726:13(2329-2335)Online publication date: 10-Sep-2014

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