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Biggers, Maurenn, McRobbie, Laurie Burns, Shanahan, James
Summary:
Media School Dean James Shanahan talks with Maureen Biggers (pictured), director of the Center of Excellence for Women in Technology at IU, and Laurie Burns McRobbie, IU's first lady who helped establish CEWiT.
Ron McCurdy Quartet, Musical setting of (work): Hughes, Langston, 1902-1967. Poems. Selections., Berry, Kataria, Haskell, Mathew, Nobel, Hannah
Summary:
A recording of IU Southeast's the Langston Hughes Project. The event took place on Thursday, February 18, 2016, at Paul W. Ogle Cultural & Community Center's Stem Concert Hall on the IU Southeast campus in honor of Diversity Week 2016 and Black History Month. It opened with performances by winners of the IU Southeast Slam Poetry Contest: We're living in a jungle by Kataria Berry, Silent voices by Mathew Haskell, and The ships by Hannah Noble. The Ron McCurdy Quartet performed Langston Hughes' Ask your mama : 12 moods for jazz.
Performers: Dr. Ron McCurdy, Trumpet/Spoken Word; Brandon Cordoba, Piano; Scott Pazera, Bass; Mitch Shiner, Drums; Student Slam Poetry Contest Winners: Mathew Haskell, a junior from Louisville, KY, with "Silent Voices, " Dalton Kirk, a sophomore from New Albany, IN, with "Close-minded World," Kataria Berry, a junior from Louisville, KY, with "We're Living in a Jungle," and Hannah Noble, a senior from Leavenworth, IN, with "The Ships." Also included, Michael Jackman, Academic Affairs Diversity Coordinator introducing Chancellor Ray Wallace; Chancellor Ray Wallace, introducing the Ron McCurdy Quartet.
This week's Through the Gates podcast looks at long-form narrative journalism with IU Media School professor of practice Tom French, a Pulitzer Prize-winner and IU alumnus.
Web scraping is a method of extracting and restructuring information from web pages. This workshop will introduce basic techniques for web scraping using popular open-source tools. The first part of the workshop will provide an overview of basic HTML elements and Python tools for developing a custom web scraper. The second part will enable participants to practice accessing websites, parsing information, and storing data in a CSV file. This workshop is intended for social scientists who are new to web scraping. No programming experience is required, but basic familiarity with HTML and Python is helpful.
NaLette Brodnax is a data scientist and fourth-year doctoral student in the Joint Public Policy program administered by the School of Public and Environmental Affairs and the Department of Political Science at Indiana University. Her research interests include education policy, policy analysis and program evaluation, and quantitative research methodology. As a graduate assistant for the Center of Excellence for Women in Technology, she is working on a number of projects intended to expose women to technology and to support women using technology in their studies and careers. Prior to entering the doctoral program, NaLette spent nine years in corporate finance roles, managing large data sets and developing financial models for large companies such as Abbott Laboratories and Nokia. She holds a BSBA from The Ohio State University with a concentration in Finance and a Master's in Public Policy from Loyola University Chicago.
Supercomputers are designed to use a command line interface and batch processing system. This means users accustomed to modern graphical interfaces must overcome a steep learning curve when switching to supercomputers. Learn how UITS Research Technologies is tackling this problem using a new graphical interface for the Karst supercomputer. Participants will have the opportunity to test the service after the presentation on their laptop/desktop devices.
Abhinav Thota is a Principal Engineer in the Research Technologies division of UITS/PTI. He is part of the Scientific Applications and Performance Tuning (SciAPT) team and helps users efficiently use HPC resources at IU.