November 27, 2006

Applied Groups Information Meeting

There will be a meeting for prospective Applied Group members as well as all current group members this Thursday, 30/Nov., at Noon in Dennis 214. If you have any interest in working in these groups, even if you are not sure if your circumstances will permit it, please attend. Pizza and drinks will be provided.

To help us plan how much pizza to order, please send e-mail to Mary Lou Rosser (rossema@earlham.edu) to let her know you are coming. When you do, please let her know of any dietary restrictions and/or topping preferences you have.

Computer Science Applied Groups
Information Meeting
Thursday 30/Nov, 12:00pm
Dennis 214

The CS Applied Groups provide infrastructure support for the CS Department and the College as a whole. This is your chance to get substantial real-world experience working on things that your fellow students depend on every day.

These groups are open to all students, at all levels. In most cases preference is given to those intending to major in CS. Group members commit to working 10 hours/week during the semester, usually as workstudy, for a term of at least three semesters, starting in the Spring. Nearly all CS majors work in one or more of these groups at some time.

The current groups are:

  • CS System and Network Administrators
  • Hardware Interfacing Project
  • CS Content Administration Group
  • Pedagogical Tools Group
  • Database Integration Group (WebDB)
  • Green Science Group

Additional groups are in planning.

There will be a meeting for prospective group members as well as all current group members this Thursday, 30/Nov., at Noon in Dennis 214. If you have any interest in working in these groups, even if you are not sure if your circumstances will permit it, please attend. Pizza and drinks will be provided.

To help us plan how much pizza to order, please send e-mail to Mary Lou Rosser (rossema@earlham.edu) to let her know you are coming. When you do, please let her know of any dietary restrictions and/or topping preferences you have.

If you have any questions, contact me, Jim Rogers (jrogers@cs.earlham.edu).

Posted by jrogers at November 27, 2006 11:46 AM
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