There is a lot of talk about networking at conferences like this. While there is nothing wrong with networking if you do it right you are really making friends. Friendship pays all sorts of dividends. For example, I met Tommy Gober at some conference. It may have been CSTA, it may have been SIGCSE, but we’ve seen each other at conferences. Tony is not at CSTA this year but we are friends on Facebook and this morning he recommended a restaurant for me to try. So I did and it was a wonderful real New Orleans style breakfast. Meeting people at CSTA is much more than just computer science.
Prior to sessions I did a pass through the exhibit hall identifying robots on exhibit. Read about that here.
I went to one morning session on using GitHub. It was very well done and walked everyone through the mechanics. It just wasn’t what I was looking for. What I want is someone to teach about source code management. Not the mechanics but the concepts and the vocabulary. It seems like every presentation I attend understands what a pull, branch, merge and what not means and why you want to do it. I don’t think that many students or teacher really understand the why of a source code control system. I want someone to walk us through a real project. Something with two people adding code and doing a merge maybe. But start with the why and words.
After that I spent some more time talking to people. Some of the talks were just catching up with people. Some were about issues facing CS education today. I may blog about that after the conference is over.
The afternoon keynote was focused on artificial intelligence and how people who think about this sort of thing for a living are thinking about it. It was interesting but it is clear that things, like standards, are not really settled. That isn’t to say that there are not standards – there are – several of them. But I think we don’t really know what the near future is going to bring. To say nothing of 4 to 5 years down the road.
I attended one session in the afternoon. I thought it would be about how to teach students to write code using AI agents. It was mostly about the presenter talking about how they use AI to develop code for their start up company. He was also pushing the case that this was the future. Interesting look into one person’s view of how the industry has and will continue to develop but I did not find a lot of actionable information.
I spent the next hour talking CS education and CSTA with a friend. There will be more about that conversation in the future.
JuiceMind sponsored a reception over a bar in Decatur Street. The food and company were great. I assume the drinks (one per person) were good as well. I appreciate it. They are nice hosts.
Some years there as been a big event someplace special hosted by one or more companies. Two years ago there was a big shindig at Caesar's Palace for example. Not this year. There are a number of large companies who have had booths in the past who are missing this year as well. I think corporate funding for CS education is drying up as many companies think AI means we don’t need to teach computer science.
CSTA did have grade level receptions for networking. I dropped into the one for grades 9 through 12. There was food and (2) drinks there. A bingo game to get people started meeting people and it looked like some small table games came out as well. People were having a good time for sure. Nicely done.
Ozobot