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Transfer Learning for Facial Emotion Recognition on Small Datasets Paolo Barile , Clara Bassano , Paolo Piciocchi (pages: 1-5) How to Link Educational Purposes and Immersive Video Games Development? An Ontological Approach Proposal Nathan Aky (pages: 6-13) Application of Building Information Modeling (BIM) in the Planning and Construction of a Building Renata Maria Abrantes Baracho , Luiz Gustavo da Silva Santiago , Antonio Tagore Assumpção Mendoza e Silva , Marcelo Franco Porto (pages: 14-19) Transformative, Transdisciplinary, Transcendent Digital Education: Synergy, Sustainability and Calamity Rusudan Makhachashvili , Ivan Semenist (pages: 20-27) New Online Tools for the Data Visualization of Bivalve Molluscs' Production Areas of Veneto Region Eleonora Franzago , Claudia Casarotto , Matteo Trolese , Marica Toson , Mirko Ruzza , Manuela Dalla Pozza , Grazia Manca , Giuseppe Arcangeli , Nicola Ferrè , Laura Bille (pages: 28-32) Geodata Processing Methodology on GIS Platforms When Creating Spatial Development Plans of Territorial Communities: Case of Ukraine Olena Kopishynska , Yurii Utkin , Ihor Sliusar , Leonid Flehantov , Mykola Somych , Oksana Yakovlieva , Olena Scryl (pages: 33-40) D-CIDE: An Interactive Code Learning Program Lukas Grant , Matthew F. Tennyson , Jason Owen (pages: 41-46) Interdisciplinary Digital Skills Development for Educational Communication: Emergency and Ai-Enhanced Digitization Rusudan Makhachashvili , Ivan Semenist , Ganna Prihodko , Irina Kolegaeva , Olexandra Prykhodchenko , Olena Tupakhina (pages: 47-51) Interdisciplinarity in Smart Systems Applied to Rural School Transport in Brazil Renata Maria Abrantes Baracho , Mozart Joaquim Magalhães Vidigal , Marcelo Franco Porto , Beatriz Couto (pages: 52-59) Peculiarities of the Realization of IT Projects for the Implementation of ERP Systems on the Path of Digitalization of Territorial Communities Activities Olena Kopishynska , Yurii Utkin , Ihor Sliusar , Khanlar Makhmudov , Olena Kalashnyk , Svitlana Moroz , Olena Kyrychenko (pages: 60-67)
ABSTRACT
Software Engineering Education at Carnegie Mellon University: One University; Programs Taught in Two Places Ray Bareiss, Mel Rosso-Llopart
Teaching Software Engineering to professional master‟s students is
a challenging endeavor, and arguably for the past 20 years,
Carnegie Mellon University has been quite successful. Although
CMU teaches Software Engineering at sites world-wide and uses
different pedagogies, the goal of the curriculum -- to produce
world-class software engineers -- remains constant. This paper
will discuss two of the most mature versions of Carnegie Mellon‟s
Software Engineering program -- the main campus program and its
“daughter program” at the Silicon Valley Campus. We discuss the
programs with respect to the dimensions of curriculum, how
students work and learn, how faculty teach, curricular materials,
and how students are assessed to provide insight into how Carnegie
Mellon continues to keep its programs fresh, to adapt them to local
needs, and to meet its goal of excellence after 20 years.
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