RICHARD
TAPIA SYMPOSIUM TO DISCUSS DIVERSITY IN COMPUTING
Recognizing and
celebrating diversity in technology fields is the goal of the Richard Tapia
Celebration of Diversity in Computing Symposium, to be held October 18-20 at the
Sofitel Hotel in Houston.
The symposium, which is
named after Richard Tapia, the Noah Harding Professor of Computational and
Applied Mathematics at Rice University, is the first in a series of events
designed to celebrate the technical contributions and career interests of
diverse people in computing fields.
The theme is "Expanding
Horizons," reflecting a focus on access to powerful knowledge from diverse
researchers, expanding the community of people in the field of computing and
sharing of knowledge between the different disciplines.
"Richard Tapia is many
things to many people: an outstanding teacher, an immensely effective mentor, a
distinguished researcher and an inspiring model for young men and women with
great aspirations and resourcefulness to match," said Rice President Malcolm
Gillis.
"Revered on the Rice
campus, he is highly regarded nationally and internationally not only in his
academic specialties, but also in the science and engineering community
generally," he said. "Very few scholars are honored with membership in a
national academy; fewer still attain national leadership positions. Richard has
done both, as a member of the National Academy of Engineering and as an
appointee to the National Science Board. His mentoring skills were recognized by
President Clinton in 1996, when he was named as one of the first recipients of
the Presidential Award for Excellence in Science."
The presenters of the
symposium are leaders in their respective fields, representing academic,
industrial and government communities. Current research on leading-edge topics
will be presented by the speakers and during poster sessions. Tailored panels
will focus on the roles of people of color in today’s technology fields.
The symposium honors the
significant contributions of Tapia, who is internationally known for his
research in computational and mathematical sciences. He is a member of the
National Academy of Engineering, the first recipient of the A. Nico Habermann
Award from the Computing Research Association and a member of the National
Science board.
"I want this symposium
to serve as a symbol and also as proof that we, as members of underrepresented
groups, can and must contribute to science and technology at the highest
levels," Tapia said.
In addition to the
speakers, there will be a town hall meeting to plan future events and a career
information center where materials about internships, job openings and other
information will be available.
The symposium is
sponsored by the Coalition to Diversify Computing, whose mission is to increase
the visibility of people of color in computing research and to provide
networking opportunities for minority researchers, faculty and students. CDC is
a joint committee of the Association of Computing Machinery (ACM), the Computing
Research Association (CRA), and the Institute of Electrical and Electronic
Engineering (IEEE) Computer Society.
For more information
about the symposium, go to
www.sdsc.edu/Tapia2001.
Rice University is consistently ranked one of America's
best teaching and research universities. It is distinguished by its: size-2,700
undergraduates and 1,500 graduate students; selectivity-10 applicants for each
place in the freshman class; resources-an undergraduate student-to-faculty ratio
of 5-to-1, and the fourth largest endowment per student among private American
universities; residential college system, which builds communities that are both
close-knit and diverse; and collaborative culture, which crosses disciplines,
integrates teaching and research, and intermingles undergraduate and graduate
work. Rice's wooded campus is located in the nation's fourth largest city and on
America's South Coast.