Donald Bren School of Information and Computer Sciences

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The Donald Bren School of Information and Computer Sciences, also known as the school of ICS or more formally as the Bren School, is an academic unit of University of California, Irvine (UCI), and the only dedicated school of computer science in the University of California system. Consisting of over a thousand students and members, the school maintains four buildings in the South-East artery of UCI's undergraduate campus, and maintains student body and research affiliations throughout UCI.[1][2]

ICS consists of three departments: Computer Science, Informatics, and Statistics. The combined groupings focus the school around the fields of computing and processing of information. The departments confer four undergraduate, eleven masters, and seven doctoral degrees in total, with some degree programs cooperating with affiliated schools.[3]

Contents

[edit] History

Beginning in 1968, three years after UCI's founding, the Department of Information and Computer Science was created as an independent department, not belonging to any school. In 2002, the 35 year old department was elevated to the status of a school, and its faculty were partitioned into two departments, the Department of Computer Science and the Department of Informatics. The Department of Statistics, founded earlier in 2002, was included as a third department in the newly created school.[1]

During 2004, the school received a 20 million USD anonymous donation. The donation was later revealed to be from local realtor, Donald Bren. The school was renamed in his honor. The donation is primarily being used to seek out and seed prestigious researchers.[4]

[edit] Programs and majors

The school's independent status allows for unique majors and fields that are not bound by the rigorous requirements traditionally set forth by other schools, such as Engineering. The school of ICS is one of less than fifty independent computer science schools in the United States, and the only one in the University of California system.[1]

There are 893 undergraduate and 256 graduate students as of 2006, a drop from previous years. The Dean of ICS, Debra J. Richardson, speculates the drop is from fears of outsourcing and the dot-com bubble burst, both reputed factors in stagnating technology jobs. However, the percentage of female enrollment is 16.8%, an increase from previous years.[2]

[edit] Undergraduate

The school possesses 4 undergraduate majors, ranging from lower level hardware to high level social computing, each providing a bachelor of science degree. Notably, Computer Engineering is not part of ICS, and resides in the Henry Samueli School of Engineering.

The school's primary major is Information and Computer Science, focused on computer science theory and software engineering. In contrast to engineering majors, additional natural sciences (such as physics) are not required to complete the major. Two upper division theoretical mathematics courses are required, along with basic calculus, linear algebra, statistics, and discrete mathematics. The program allows students more freedom to pursue a selected field in computer science. Though not required for a degree, the school certifies specializations within the major:[3]

  • Artificial Intelligence
  • Computer Systems
  • Implementation and Analysis of Algorithms
  • Information Systems
  • Networks and Distributed Systems
  • Software Systems

The second most popular major within the school is Computer Science, similar in composition to ICS. Though more limiting in electives, the major was formed around the recommended courses set by ACM and IEEE, and features a more classical computer science curriculum.[3]

Computer Science and Engineering requires more engineering preparation and courses than Information and Computer Science, including physics, electrical engineering, and multivariate calculus. Due to the nature of the program, it is hosted jointly with the Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Sciences.[5]

The newest major is Informatics, unique in the UC system, focusing on software engineering, social computing, and management. The higher level of social abstraction prepares students in such fields as software analysis, management, design, and interfaces.[3]

[edit] Graduate

Committed to research as a University of Califonia school, ICS provides 11 master's level and 7 doctorate level graduate programs. Since computing is a part of many other fields (which use or interact with computing technology), ICS collaborates with other schools in many of its programs.[6]

The Department of Computer Science offers a general major to those who have no specialized field, and is awarded as Information and Computer Science (M.S.). Computer Science (M.S.,Ph.D.) allows for a wide range of fields, similar to the general degree; however, doctoral degrees require a particular research interest within the field, unlike the general degree. Embedded Systems (M.S.) more narrowly focuses students on the implementation of specialized computer systems. Knowledge Discovery and Data (M.S.) applies to informatics fields like information processing and to computer science fields such as artificial intelligence.[6]

The Department of Informatics offers its own general degree Informatics Track in General Informatics (M.S.,Ph.D.), however doctoral candidates must have a specific research interest. Informatics Track in Interactive and Collaborative Technology (M.S.,Ph.D.) narrows its general degree to the field of human–computer interaction, with end parties as wholly human or man and machine. Software engineering is researched under the Informatics Track in Software (M.S.,Ph.D.) degree, as software development processes are directly related to human interaction and information systems.[6]

Three multi-discipline fields exist, spread across more than one school. Networked Systems (M.S.,Ph.D.) involves both the School of Engineering and the school of ICS. The research area covers high and low levels of telecommunications and computer networks. Arts Computation Engineering (M.S.), as its name suggests, covers both the School of Engineering and the Claire Trevor School of the Arts in addition to ICS. The field relies heavily on high level informatics principles, applying science to the arts. Informatics in Biology & Medicine (M.S.,Ph.D.), requires classes within the wide fields of Biology. Research may range from microscopic systems, such as proteins, or macro-level systems, such as populations.[6]

Though the Department of Statistics currently has no undergraduate degrees, it offers one graduate program: Statistics (M.S.,Ph.D.). The graduate program may help model many different problems, and is highly applicable to researchers in other fields such as economics and biology.[6]

[edit] Faculty, staff, and alumni

The current Dean of the Bren School is Debra J. Richardson (Ph.D. 1981 University of Massachusetts, Amherst). Richardson is also the director of the Ada Byron Research Center for Diversity in Computing and Information Technology, and Microelectronics Innovation and Computer Research Opportunities.[7]

Noteworthy alumni have graduated from the school, including: Roy Fielding, co-creator of Hypertext Transfer Protocol and the Apache HTTP Server;[8] Patrick Hanratty, CAD pioneer;[9] Paul Mockapetris, creator of Domain Name System and Simple Mail Transfer Protocol;[10] Steven Joe, CEO of D-Link North America.[11]

[edit] Buildings and computer labs

The school currently has three associated buildings operational, providing over 100,000 square feet of space. Labs are located in each building, with over 500 administered computers total. All buildings are positioned adjacent to the School of Engineering at the South-East side of UCI's undergraduate campus.[12][13]

The Information and Computer Science building (ICS), previously named the Computer Science building, is the primary facility for undergraduate instruction, consisting 24,416 square feet on 4 floors, opposite to the Engineering Tower (ET). The bottom (and first) floor links physically to ET's bottom floor, while the second floor shares the same plaza with the ET. The bottom floor consists of three instructional labs, CS183, CS189, and CS192 -- each lab contains 45 Microsoft Windows Server machines, used primarily as desktops for first year undergraduates. Lab CS193 is used for business related software projects for upper division undergraduates, and holds 24 Windows machines. Both the first and second floors contain instruction halls and classrooms, while the third and fourth primarily contain meeting and faculty offices, ecept for CS364.[14]

The building also has the largest computer lab, CS364, containing 117 Windows, 12 Mac OS X, and 12 Sun Solaris Java boxes. The lab is also located next to the air conditioned server room, visible to each other through a large window.[15][14]

Information and Computer Science 2 (ICS2), is a narrow computing facility surrounding the South-East side of the ICS tower. ICS2 houses graduate offices in 9,731 square feet of space. It is also home to the Human Computer Interaction lab.[16]

Bren Hall is the latest addition to the school, completed in early 2007. It consists of 87,000 square feet, making it the largest building in the ICS family. It houses offices for many ICS faculty and staff, in addition to the 4 lecture halls and 10 classrooms.[17]

Two former buildings, the Frank Gehry-designed ICS Engineering Research Facility (IERF, a 9,954 square foot laboratory facility, with an added instruction hall and classroom) and Computer Science/Engineering (CS/E, a 6,681 square foot office and facility building near Bren Hall and IERF) were demolished in January 2007.[18]

[edit] Associated bodies

[edit] Research organizations

ICS helped found the Ada Byron Research Center (ABRC), which helps minorities in the field of Computer Science. ABRC is named in honor of the 19th century female mathematician Ada Lovelace, a symbol for the underrepresented numbers of females studying computer science. ABRC aims at not only increases minority researchers, but closing the digital divide, the metaphorical gap between the technologically rich and poor. The current director is the Dean Richardson of ICS.[19]

The California Institute for Telecommunications and Information Technology (Calit2), is a multidisciplinary research organization within the University of California. UC Irvine and UC San Diego currently house the two Calit2 buildings. Calit2 attempts to bring theory to practice through its "top-down" "innovation" programs. Space at Irvine's Calit2 building is provided to any collaborative project that fits within Calit2's goals.[20][21]

[edit] Student organizations

The school has several computer related student clubs and an on campus house community.

[edit] Awards and rankings

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ a b c Bren School, About the school, 2006. URL accessed December 10, 2006.
  2. ^ a b UC Irvine, Headcounts by Academic Unit and Level, 2006. URL accessed December 10, 2006.
  3. ^ a b c d Bren School, Undergraduate degrees, 21 August 2006. URL accessed December 10, 2006.
  4. ^ Bren School, About the Bren gift, 2006. URL accessed December 10, 2006.
  5. ^ UC Irvine, Undergraduate Major in Computer Science and Engineering, 2006. URL accessed December 10, 2006.
  6. ^ a b c d e Bren School, Graduate Studies, Information on all the degrees offered by the school, 20 October 2006. URL accessed December 14, 2006.
  7. ^ Bren School, Dean's bio, 2006. URL accessed December 10, 2006.
  8. ^ Fielding, Roy T., [http://www.ics.uci.edu/~fielding/ Roy T. Fielding], Fielding's ICS homepage, 8 December 2003. URL accessed December 10, 2006.
  9. ^ Dalton-Taggart, Rachael, Gentleman Genius: Patrick Hanratty, History of CAD and Hanratty's contributions, November 2004. URL accessed December 10, 2006.
  10. ^ Nominum, Paul Mockapetris Chairman and Chief Scientist, Company biography of Paul Mockapetris, 2006. URL accessed December 10, 2006.
  11. ^ D-Link,D-LINK SYSTEMS' STEVEN JOE NAMED 'CEO OF THE YEAR' BY ORANGE COUNTY AMERICAN ELECTRONICS ASSOCIATION, 24 May 2004. URL accessed December 10, 2006.
  12. ^ Bren School, Facts and figures, 2006. URL accessed December 10, 2006.
  13. ^ UC Irvine, Map of UCI, 2006. URL accessed December 10, 2006.
  14. ^ a b Bren School, ICS building floor plan, 2006. URL accessed December 10, 2006.
  15. ^ Bren School, ICS Lab Hardware, 2006. URL accessed December 10, 2006.
  16. ^ Bren School, ICS 2 building floor plan, 2006. URL accessed December 10, 2006.
  17. ^ Bren School, Bren Hall, 2006. URL accessed December 10, 2006.
  18. ^ Bren School, IERF building floor plan, 2006. URL accessed December 10, 2006. Bren School, CSE building floor plan, 2006. URL accessed December 10, 2006. UC Irvine destroys Frank Gehry building, Associated Press, January 23, 2007.
  19. ^ Williams, Michelle, New UCI center promotes diversity in technology fields, 8 January 2004. URL accessed December 10, 2006.
  20. ^ Calit2, About Us Overview , Calit2's official summary page, 2006. URL accessed December 10, 2006.
  21. ^ Cheung, Jonathan, About Us Overview , Calit2's official summary page, 2006. URL accessed December 10, 2006.

[edit] External links