Strategy seminar of the Department 2014

The strategy seminar for the Department of Computer Science was arranged at the Kisakallio sports institute in Lohja on 26-27 May 2014. In addition to the strategy work, the programme included meals and coffees, sports, and sauna baths. The high winds blew frisbees and canoes into the bushes. However, the water in Lake Lohjanjärvi was warm, some 20 degrees according to the skin thermometer.  The seminar was attended by 73, and Esko also visited to partake of the supper in good company.

The theme for this year’s seminar was the planning of a Department vision and strategy for year 2020. The work will serve as a basis for the development, starting next year, of the 2017-2020 strategy for the University of Helsinki, along with the target programmes and plans of action to implement it.  As per usual, the work was carried out in workshops, which were this time formed according to staff groupings as follows: professors and assistant professors (chair: Teemu Roos); lecturers and equivalent (Teemu Kerola); post-docs (Leena Salmela); doctoral students (Arto Vihavainen); research assistants and part-time teachers (Juhani Toivonen); administrative staff (Pasi Vettenranta); students (Johannes Verwijnen); foreigners (Jürgen Münch).

Before the strategy seminar itself, the workshops met to consider the Department vision. As a synthesis of the considerations, the following shared vision for the Department in 2020 was produced:

The quality of research and teaching at the Department is internationally high and attracts the best undergraduate (BSc) and graduate (MSc, PhD) students. Two to three research areas are of world class, and two to three are rising towards it. The Department is highly visible in international research communities.

Education at the Department is based on current pedagogical advances in teaching, especially e-learning. The contents of courses are constantly kept in line with the current needs of industry and society. The students are continuously supported in their studies by different modes of life-long learning.

The administration and IT services of the Department are based on understanding the real tasks, needs and motives of the users who also have a significant role in continuous development of the services.

The Department has an active role in interdisciplinary partnerships with strategically selected high-quality departments, especially within the University of Helsinki. The partnerships are founded on the strong research output of the Department. There are effective mechanisms for the start-up activities of researchers.

The Department is an international and collective community, open to new ideas, and different opinions, cultures and people. The best students and researchers are actively recruited nationally and internationally.

During the first seminar day, the workshops in Kisakallio designed strategic measures for making this vision come true. A commendable 80 suggestions were proposed, 10 per workshop. During the second day, these propositions were grouped and ordered according to priority in a joint brainstorming session chaired by the experts (“Builders of Success") from BoMentis Coaching House, Leni Grünbaum and Antti Soikkanen.

As an end product of the brainstorming session, the following most significant strategic measures were devised, ordered into six categories:

  1. Quality of research and teaching
  • Finding the right people and keeping them
  • New models for recruitment: 10-year recruitment plan, more tenure-track positions, earlier recruitment to tenure track, flexible recruitment
  • Sharing and communication between researchers and teachers: good practices, collaboration
  • Stable long-term funding and budgeting
  1. Education
  • Research-based teaching: making links between theory and research done at the Department
  • More research orientation to Bachelor studies
  • PhD courses: more transparency, less workload
  • Student guidance: career-path approach, extra teaching for weaker students
  1. Administration and IT services
  • Research support: IT engineering
  • Interfacing with university-level services: info to us about them, influencing them so that they work
  1. Interdisciplinary partnerships
  • Interdisciplinary engagement: research collaboration, teaching to prepare experts able to bridge gaps
  • Interdisciplinary study profiles: more diverse minors for students, adjustment of courses to support interdisciplinary degrees
  • Start-up know-how support: information sources, contacts with industry
  • Contact person and mechanisms to connect with other departments and the industry
  1. International and collective community
  • Information officer (“tiedottaja”): image and community building, channels (media, alumni, foreign staff and students)
  • Preparation of easy-to-distribute materials by information officer
  • Space [and time] for informal meetings: regular meetings, self-organization, promoting of research to students
  • Internal get-togethers: fixed time
  1. Leadership
  • Distributed leadership: bottom-up
  • Calculated risk taking: fail fast, don’t punish failures

We will start to put the strategic measures envisioned at the seminar into practice at the Department already before year 2020. The first measure we have embarked upon is to improve the communal spirit of the working community: we have already had two “Perjantai Pullas” at a fixed time, at 2 o’clock on Friday in the 2nd-floor break room. It seems to have gone down well.

Jukka Paakki

 

Created date

13.06.2014 - 11:47

The university’s team Game of Nolife won Western European programming contest for students

In the finals in Thailand in spring 2016, the students from the University of Helsinki will face the best teams in the world.

The University of Helsinki has won the inter-university NWERC 2015 programming contest that was held in Linköping recently. It was attended by 95 teams from Western Europe. The Game of Nolife team from the University of Helsinki consisted of computer-science and maths students Tuukka Korhonen, Olli Hirviniemi and Otte Heinävaara.

The Carat research team has published a dataset focusing on collaborative energy diagnostics of mobile devices and applications

 

 

The Carat research team from University of Helsinki publishes a dataset from the Carat project (http://carat.cs.helsinki.fi/) focusing on collaborative energy diagnostics of mobile devices and applications. The dataset was presented at the IEEE PerCom’15 conference last spring in the publication "Energy Modeling of System Settings: A Crowdsourced Approach" that won the Marc Weiser Best Paper Award given at the conference.

Eemil Lagerspetz was awarded a grant by the Jorma Ollila fund of Nokia Foundation on November 24, 2015

 

 
 
Eemil Lagerspetz was awarded a grant by the Jorma Ollila fund of Nokia Foundation on November 24, 2015. Congratulations!
 
The fund was launched in year 2014 to support post doctoral research career development. 
The title of Eemil’s post doctoral research is “Mind The Gap: Combining Trajectory Datasets for a Holistic Picture of Human Mobility” and the research will be carried out at the Hong Kong University of Science and Technology (HKUST) in 2016.
 

Collaborative Networking (CoNe) group researchers got the best paper award at 2nd ACM Conference on Information-Centric Networking (ICN 2015)

 

Collaborative Networking (CoNe) group researchers got the best paper award at 2nd ACM Conference on Information-Centric Networking (ICN 2015), one of the most prestigious venues for ICN research. The article entitled Pro-Diluvian: Understanding Scoped-Flooding for Content Discovery in ICN is lead by Liang Wang - a recent PhD graduate from CoNe research group, and is the outcome of collaboration with Suzan Bayhan and Jussi Kangasharju from UH, Jörg Ott from Aalto University, Arjuna Sathiaseelan and Jon Crowcroft from Cambridge University.