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CUSP (Consortium for Smart and Mobile Phone Apps) Teaching application development, interacting with industry and academia, and encouraging social entrepreneurship. Ravi Shankar, PhD, MBA, PE, Fellow (AHA) Professor, College of Engineering and Computer Science Francis X McAfee, MFA Associate Professor, College of Arts and Letters Don Ploger, PhD Associate Professor, College of Education Michael Harris, PhD Chair and Associate Professor, College of Arts and Letters Florida Atlantic University, Boca Raton, FL
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Goals and Objectives Goal: Build an infrastructure to secure NSF funding Process with CUSP: (Consortium for smart phone and Mobile Apps) – Facilitate teaching collaboration across disciplines – Use state-of-the-art technologies, topics, and open source tools – Reward collaborators with funds from Apps marketed – Seed collaborative research from such funds – Apply to NSF and get funded – Repeat every year with 1 to 2 other groups – Extension: Involve multiple universities Potential Results at our university: – Increased institutional funding, enrolment, quality of education & research, innovation, and prestige
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Success Stories (past three years) Several Multidisciplinary courses: – Android Apps– ~360 High school, UG, Grad, Engineers – Robotics - ~45 UG and Grads; 15 High school (Sp’12) – Semantic Web - ~40 Grad students Steve Jobs’ way: Integrate technology, art, humanities, business, innovation, research, and education, as appropriate Key Additions: Use all open source tools; leverage university infrastructure; and market Apps to raise revenue for authors & university
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1. ESP Course for High School Students (Su 2010) Provided high school students chance to learn application development---promotional, artistic, and programming. Encouraged entrepreneurship/commerciali zation. 7 Game Apps to be marketed http://android.fau.edu/
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2. Social Impact Games: Engineering Undergraduates Collaboration with Arts & Letters: Anthropology and Fine Arts (Sp’11) Spring 2012: Four way collaboration, including Business College, and students from four disciplines (65 students)
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3. Android Chess Robotics: Undergrads and 9-12 Collaborators: Education, Arts & Letters, and High Schools, STEM Focus http://truther2faurobotics.wordpress.com/ http://robotics.fau.edu/ Fall 2011: Undergraduate Engineering course on Robotic Art (24) Spring 2012: Mechatronics for high achieving high school students (17) Kits and Apps
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4. Smart Web Applications : Combining Semantic and Intelligent Web concepts Example from Fall ‘10: Android Off-Road Trail : Using GeonamesGeonames Fall 2011 Apps: Academic and Medical - Focus on helping an individual http://fwythedabney.wordpress.com/ http://semanticweb.fau.edu/
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5. ESP Course (Su ‘11): 30 students (9 High Schools) http://vimeo.com/album/1660512 Marketable Applications: 7+
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Methodology ( Past 2 years) Driving Factors: NSF Funding Criteria – Broad Impact, Intellectual Merit, STEM, Integration of Resch & Education, Diversity, Dissemination, Sustenance, and Assessment, (in addition to a good scientific/technical proposal). Strategic Decision made to address these issues and Apply OPP principles (to significantly increase design productivity) developed with Motorola grant. See www.csi.fau.edu The experience, however, has been truly rewarding in its own right! Teaching: 450 (High school to Graduate) Students & Business --- ‘STEM’ Focus App Development: Games, Social Impact, Educational Others: Chess Robotics, Semantic Web ALL Open Source Tools: Code/Designs available; community help & service
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Methodology (2 years)…. Collaborations: with arts & letters, education, business Soon others: nursing, urban planning, and science Websites (FAU and Student Blog Sites): -- ‘Dissemination’ android.fau.edu (135K hits), robotics.fau.edu, semanticweb.fau.edu New – student and team blog sites: free wordpress.com Business Ventures: -- ‘Broad Impact’ 4 Student companies – Engineering & Business Majors; University relationship ( Appstractions, Mobilitude, DroidTroiz, Pathway Media) 2nd prize in university business competition; FAU Owl Radio; NSF partner; and Video Clips Commercialization: -- ‘ Sustenance’ 14 Apps to be marketed (by Dec ‘12) Goals: Revenue for the authors and self-sustenance Proposals submitted: 4 to NSF (not funded); 1990s: 3 funded Led to this re-thinking Now, better infrastructure and higher probability
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Proposal Wish to use my sabbatical leave during Fall ‘12-Sp’13 for this Build CUSP (Consortium for Smart Phone and Mobile Apps) As a multi-university collaboration Leverage our experience with mobile systems Help /contribute to building a different type of infrastructure Replicate courses and multi-college collaborations Reach out to more high schools, enhance STEM and diversity goals Build and market Apps; and share revenue with authors Seed research collaboration of these authors/groups; and submit proposals Potential Results: Submit large multi-institutional proposals on STEM/STEP to NSF/ DoEd - $2M / 5 years, with PIs: Chairs and Deans Submit smaller NSF Proposals – in Research, SBIR, Teaching – typical $0.5 M/ 3 years or less Increased institutional funding, enrolment, positive impact on education & research, innovation, and prestige
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Ravi Shankar PhD, MBA, PE, Fellow (AHA) Research Focus: Systems Integration, complex systems, Design Automation, and Biomedical engineering Teaching: Computer and electrical engr., computer Science 5 US Patents: 3 in biomedicine, 2 in computers – Patent pending: Nearly Decomposable Design, Biomedical – Royalty received by FAU: $1M (50% of FAU’s total) Tenure at FAU: 28+ years Total research cash grants received: $4.2 M (Motorola, IBM, NSF, Harris, DARPA, Cadence, and Vasocor) Experienced and successful in grant writing, funding, innovation, multi-disciplinary collaboration, and training See: http://www.csi.fau.edu/display/dc/Directorhttp://www.csi.fau.edu/display/dc/Director
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Center for Systems Integration Formed in 1993 - with funding from Motorola Paging & NSF Total funding: $3.5 M from industry and federal sources Recent Grants: – OPP (One Pass to Production) from iDEN, Motorola, at $1.1 M – SBA (Small Business Administration) at $123 K Current Focus: Mobile, Web, and Complex Systems Philosophy: Open Source, Multi-Disciplinary Collaboration, Social Entrepreneurship, industry alliance, and small business formation by our students See www.csi.fau.edu, android.fau.edu, robotics.fau.edu, semanticweb.fau.edu www.csi.fau.edu
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