Computer science upgraded
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Deirdre Newman
The wait is over.
The dream of the university’s Department of Information and
Computer Science to become a full-fledged school was realized Monday
when the Board of Regents approved the change.
UC Irvine officials reserved comment until they could work out
some final details of the arrangement.
Debra Richardson, chair of the school, did say the move will
elevate the new school’s visibility and enhance its recruitment
efforts.
“It really says something about the commitment of this campus to
this field and says something about the interdisciplinary nature and
breadth of our program that we’re able to function as a school,”
Richardson said. “A lot of that is attractive to faculty who might be
looking for a new, cutting-edge, on-the-frontier kind of unit to
join.”
UCI established the department in 1968, three years after the
university opened.
Since its inception, it has functioned as an independent unit,
offering bachelor’s, master’s and doctoral degrees. It is the
university’s second largest undergraduate major, fourth largest
master’s program and fifth largest doctoral program.
Department faculty first floated the idea of becoming a school
about 10 years ago, Richardson said. Richardson became chair in July
2000 and made it her primary goal.
The staff felt the department deserved to be a school because of
its large size, its popularity as a major and its need to keep up
with development in the field.
The department submitted a proposal to campus officials in March,
and the Academic Senate approved it in May.
The transformation from a department to a school follows a trend
at universities around the country. More than 40 computer science
schools have been established nationwide. UCI’s will be the first in
the University of California system.
* DEIRDRE NEWMAN covers education. She may be reached at (949)
574-4221 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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