User:SWeiss

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More recently, Prof. Weiss has become interested in computer science education as a research topic in itself, with a particular interest in the teaching of software testing to computer science students.  
 
More recently, Prof. Weiss has become interested in computer science education as a research topic in itself, with a particular interest in the teaching of software testing to computer science students.  
  
Prof. Weiss was not always a computer scientist. He started out by earning a degree in architecture school from The Cooper Union for the Advancement of Science and Art, in 1973, and worked in that discipline, initially in architectural offices, and later with his own design and construction firm, through 1980, when he returned to school to obtain an undergraduate degree in mathematics. What architecture, mathematics, and computer science have in common is the creation of things, such as physical environments, models of abstractions or natural phenomena, or software. Consistent with this is that, in his spare time, Prof. Weiss loves to cook, to build, and to fix things.
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Prof. Weiss was not always a computer scientist. He started out by earning a degree in architecture school from The Cooper Union for the Advancement of Science and Art, in 1973, and worked in that discipline, initially in architectural offices, and later with his own design and construction firm, through 1980, when he returned to school to obtain an undergraduate degree in mathematics. What architecture, mathematics, and computer science have in common is the creation of things, such as physical environments, models of abstractions or natural phenomena, or software. Consistent with this is that, in his spare time, Prof. Weiss loves cooking, indoor gardening, building and repairing furniture, and photography.

Revision as of 17:41, 1 May 2016

Stewart N. Weiss

Stewart N. Weiss is an Associate Professor in the Department of Computer Science in Hunter College of the City University of New York, New York City's public university system. Hunter College has more than 23,000 students and 1800 full- and part-time faculty members. As of spring 2016, the Computer Science Department consisted of eleven full-time faculty members, with two more joining the Department in fall 2016. Prof. Weiss joined the Department in 1987 and has been teaching there ever since.

Prof. Weiss received his Ph.D. in Computer Science in 1987 from the Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences of New York University, under the mentor-ship of Dr. Elaine Weyuker. His research interest was in the area of software testing, concentrating on the testing of parallel and concurrent software, but also expanding to theoretical and experimental comparisons of various software testing methods and paradigms. Prof. Weiss's research later shifted to include the study of improved methods of computational quantum chemistry, specifically in approximation methods for computing molecular energy using ab initio methods.

More recently, Prof. Weiss has become interested in computer science education as a research topic in itself, with a particular interest in the teaching of software testing to computer science students.

Prof. Weiss was not always a computer scientist. He started out by earning a degree in architecture school from The Cooper Union for the Advancement of Science and Art, in 1973, and worked in that discipline, initially in architectural offices, and later with his own design and construction firm, through 1980, when he returned to school to obtain an undergraduate degree in mathematics. What architecture, mathematics, and computer science have in common is the creation of things, such as physical environments, models of abstractions or natural phenomena, or software. Consistent with this is that, in his spare time, Prof. Weiss loves cooking, indoor gardening, building and repairing furniture, and photography.

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