Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Training of the Carnegie Mellon Teams Greg Kesden Eugene Fink Danny Sleator.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Training of the Carnegie Mellon Teams Greg Kesden Eugene Fink Danny Sleator."— Presentation transcript:

1 Training of the Carnegie Mellon Teams Greg Kesden Eugene Fink Danny Sleator

2 Excellent talent pool - One of the best undergraduate programs in the United States Resources and constraints The challenge is to improve the performance within these resources. Limited funding - Travel to the competition - Weekly pizza Limited training time - 200 hours/year for the international team - 100 hours/year for the other students

3 Coaches Greg Kesden (since 1999): Leader and programmer Eugene Fink (since 2004): Bookkeeper and theoretician Danny Sleator (since 2008): Real theoretician

4 Percentile 05 060708 Year 0% 25% 50% 75% 100% World Finals Historic performance 04 05060708 1 4 5 6 10 2 3 Year Place Regional Competitions East Central North America Top competitors: Waterloo Purdue Toronto

5 Weekly practices: 3 hours, 20–60 students Programming competition club Weekly theory sessions: 2 hours, 4–8 students Optional homeworks 04 05060708 10 Year 20 30 40 Number of students

6 ACM-style competitions (individual and in teams) Practices Emphasis on hands-on problem solving; little theory Open to everyone; optional course credit with only good grades Free pizza

7 Analysis of hard problems and review of advanced algorithms Theory sessions Brainstorming discussions with follow-up implementation at home Open only to the best students No pizza

8 Two-semester training Basic training: Everyone Advanced training: International team Fun programming: Other students

9 Competition-skill training - Problem selection - Programming on paper - Work in teams - Low resubmission rate Fall: Basic training Identification of new talent - Questionnaires - Individual competitions Selection of two teams - Choice of the best students - Experiments with different team compositions

10 International team: Advanced training Spring: Two tracks Five-hour practices with international problems Intensive theoretical discussions Homework coding for hard problems Other students: Fun programming Three-hour practices with regional problems Less attention to optional homeworks Focus on pizza

11 Training materials


Download ppt "Training of the Carnegie Mellon Teams Greg Kesden Eugene Fink Danny Sleator."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google