Carol Spradling

Carol Spradling is an American professor, computer scientist, and Director of the School of Computer Science and Information Systems at Northwest Missouri State University in Maryville, Missouri. She is known for her work with computer ethics, profession-based education, interactive media, and expanding the involvement of underrepresented groups and women in computing. Spradling teaches computer science courses, and serves as a provost fellow and a liaison to the Northland Center For Advanced Professional Studies program.[1] Spradling served on the Missouri Department of Higher Education Panel on The Role of Faculty in Establishing and Implementing a Blueprint for Missouri Higher Education.[2]


Carol Spradling
Born1950
NationalityAmerican
Alma materUniversity of Nebraska - Lincoln
Scientific career
Fields
  • Computer Science
  • Instructional Technology
InstitutionsNorthwest Missouri State University

Spradling is the co-founder of the Missouri Iowa Nebraska Kansas Women in Computing Conference, a regional meeting that coincides and is modeled after the Grace Hopper Celebration of Women in Computing.[3] Started in 2011 and held biannually, the conference gathers students, faculty, and technology leaders as part of a nationwide effort to address the decline of women in the computer science professions and discuss strategies for improving representation in the field from underrepresented groups.[4] She is active in the National Center for Women & Information Technology Academic Alliance.[5]

She is the recipient of the 2012 Missouri Governor's Award for Excellence in Education[6] and received the Dean's Faculty Award for Service in 2014.

Selected publications

  • 2014. Using interdisciplinary teams to develop comprehensive integrated digital marketing communication campaigns, Journal of Computing Sciences in Colleges, 29(5), Pages 208–218.
  • 2013. Computer science curriculum 2013: social and professional recommendations from the ACM/IEEE-CS task force, Proceedings of the 44th ACM technical symposium on Computer science education.
  • 2012. Proposed revisions to the social and professional knowledge area for CS2013, Proceedings of the 43rd ACM technical symposium on Computer Science Education.
  • 2009. A comprehensive survey on the status of social and professional issues in United States undergraduate computer science programs and recommendations., Computer science education, 19.3, Pages 137–153.
  • 2009. From the man on the moon to 2001 and beyond: the evolving social and ethical impact of computers a session to commemorate SIGCSE' 40 anniversary, Proceedings of the 40th ACM technical symposium on Computer science education, Volume 41, Issue 1.
  • 2008. Ethics training and decision-making: do computer science programs need help?, ACM SIGCSE Bulletin 40.1, Pages 153–157.
  • 2008. Examining the data on computer ethics in the classroom, ACM SIGCAS Computers and Society: Volume 38 Issue 2.
  • 2008. An interdisciplinary major emphasizing multimedia, ACM SIGCSE Proceedings of the 39th SIGCSE technical symposium on Computer science education, Pages 388–391.
  • 2007. A study of social and professional ethics in undergraduate computer science programs: Faculty perspectives , ETD collection for University of Nebraska - Lincoln.Paper AAI3255458.
gollark: <@357932279231807488> This is why we need some sort of standard for punching over the internet.
gollark: I think a better solution would be a gender-neutral singular pronoun which you can actually distinguish from a plural one, but nobody seems to want that.
gollark: I think the whole they-singular thing is kind of inelegant, but a workable solution at least.
gollark: https://meta.stackexchange.com/questions/334248/an-update-to-our-community-and-an-apology?cb=1
gollark: Wow, the SE "apology" hit 1121 downvotes now!

See also

References

  1. "Northwest alumni to honor seven for service". Maryville Daily Forum. Retrieved 2017-03-02.
  2. Missouri Department of Higher Education. "Preparing Missourians to Succeed: A Blueprint for Higher Education" (PDF). www.dhe.mo.gov. Retrieved 2017-03-02.
  3. "UMKC and Northwest Missouri State University professors co-chair first regional conference on women in computing". University of Missouri-Kansas City. Retrieved 2017-03-02.
  4. "Regional Women in Computing to Hold Biennial Conference in Kansas City". The Kansas City Star. Retrieved 2017-03-02.
  5. "NCWIT Academic Alliance Members". National Center for Women & Information Technology. Retrieved 2017-03-02.
  6. "Dr. Carol Spradling named recipient of 2012 Governor's Award for Excellence in Education". Northwest Missouri State University. Retrieved 2017-03-02.
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