Depts. of Music and Computer Science
Computational Thinking through Computing and Music
an interdisciplinary NSF TUES project
Video of live coding performance
Abstract in IEEE Computer Society CS Digital Library
- with link to full paper as published (requires member login)
Additional Co-Presenters
PowerPoint Slides (as a PDF file)
- C. Holly Johnston, Music Teacher, Stony Brook Middle School, Westford, MA
- Marie Gleason-Tada, Instructional Technoloty Specialist, Parker Middle School, Chelmsford, MA
PowerPoint Slides (as a PDF file)
In 2007, the National Science Foundation (NSF) funded 19 “Community Building” awards intended to “bring stakeholders together to discuss the challenges and opportunities inherent in transforming undergraduate computing education, and to identify creative strategies to do so.” Our “creative strategy” has been to develop interdisciplinary courses that bring Computer Science (CS) majors together with Art, Music, and Theatre majors to work on joint projects in the area of exhibition and performance technologies. We call this strategy “Performamatics,” because the common thread in these projects is that “many tasks, performed by multiple people, must come together on a tight schedule by a specific date to achieve a desired result. Performamatics also implies that each team member must ‘perform’ his or her task in a way that can be integrated into a final product, regardless of whether that team member participates visibly in the culminating event.”
This presentation discusses the successes and failures we have experienced in trying to implement Performamatics courses over the last two years. In that time we have experimented with two pedagogical models: (a) “synchronized” courses in which students in different disciplines come together at strategic points to work on joint projects, and (b) “hybrid” courses in which all students enroll in a single course that has two instructors, one from Computer Science and one from Art, Music, or Theatre. Our presentation will describe the content of these courses, provide examples of student work, and suggest ways in which both the student and professor collaborations could be improved, all with the intent to provide others with solid guidance on implementing similar strategies at their own institutions.