National Computer Science School

The National Computer Science School (NCSS) is an annual computer science summer school, organised by the School of Information Technologies at the University of Sydney, Australia, which has taken place annually since 1996 over a five- to ten-day period in the January school holidays.[1] Attending students participate in an intensive course in computer programming with Python. Prior to 2010, the main project of the week was the development of a website and its backend software for presentation to a nominated charity. This was replaced with creating a social network. The School also incorporates a number of social activities, competitions and outings.[2]

National Computer Science School
LocationSchool of IT
Coordinates33°53′18″S 151°11′39″E

Eligibility

Each year NCSS is open to all students in Australia and New Zealand entering their final year of high school, but also considers applications from particularly gifted students from previous years. The NCSS assumes no previous programming or web design experience, and is designed to suit a wide range of abilities and experience. Some students who have participated in the program are invited back the following year and are known internally as "returners".

2012 saw the first student from the Northern Territory.

2015 saw the first student siblings.

Project

Students attending NCSS are split into eight groups. Four groups develop a website using Python and other web technologies, while the other four groups experiment with the BBC micro:bit, flashed with MicroPython firmware. These are referred to as the 'web' and 'embedded' streams, respectively.

History

Prior to 2010, the main NCSS project required (re)designing the web site and building a search engine for a charitable organisation. In the past, these have included-

As of 2010, the charity angle was dropped and the project was changed to build a social networking application.

Social Activities

To make things more interesting and engaging for the students attending the school, a number of interesting games and activities are carried out.[5] These may include-

  • Trivia Night
  • Treasure Hunt
  • Cryptography Challenge
  • Programming Challenge
  • Simulation (where teams compete to act out various algorithms)
  • Afternoon Outing

There are other, more interesting activities, which are disclosed only to attendees.

gollark: Perl is retroactively Macron?!
gollark: It's too complicated, says basically nothing about Macron, and is just ugly and beeoidal (class φ-7).
gollark: The Committee is bikeshedding horribly wrt. logo.
gollark: I don't like it.
gollark: What is the Macron logo?

References


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.