| Monday | Tuesday | Wednesday | Thursday | Friday | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 9:25 AM | Class Prep & Grading |
MTH 383? | Office Hours | MTH 383? | Work at home |
| 10:00 AM | |||||
| 10:45 AM | CSC 270 | CSC 270 | |||
| 11:30 PM | |||||
| 12:10 PM | Lunch | ||||
| 12:50 PM | Office Hours | Office Hours | Committee meeting | Office Hours | |
| 1:40 PM | |||||
| 2:20 PM | CSC 160? | CSC 160? | |||
| 3:00 PM | CSC 271? | CSC 271? | |||
| 3:45 PM | Go Home | Dept. mtg or colloquium |
|||
| 4:30 PM | Go Home | Go Home | |||
I can be reached by telephone at 516-877-4483, or (preferably)
by email, sbloch@adelphi.edu.
(PGP key and GPG key
available).
FAXes can be sent to me ("Attn: Dr. Bloch") at
516-877-4499.
I'm the principal investigator on an NSF grant that supports one-week summer workshops for college and University faculty (high school teachers may apply too) on an effective approach to the teaching of introductory computer programming. The summer 2008 workshops will be
This workshop will resemble our earlier series of workshops targeted at high school and middle school teachers, part of the TeachScheme! Project. However, the college-level workshops in 2007-2009 will also cover the transition from the Scheme language to Java, which needs to be done carefully so as to take advantage of the good programming habits developed in the Scheme phase.
I'm co-Chair of the University Assessment Committee, whose other co-Chair is Audrey Blumberg. More information about Adelphi's assessment activities can be found by contacting Nava Lerer, or visiting the Office of Research, Assessment, and Planning.
Most of my academic research work concerns itself with computational complexity theory, mathematical logic, or computer science pedagogy. A bibliography is available in various formats.
I have an
Erdös
number of 3, through two paths:
Stephen Bloch -> Jonathan Buss -> Jeff Shallit -> Paul Erdös
Stephen Bloch -> Judy Goldsmith -> Ken Kunen -> Paul Erdös
My academic lineage (from student to doctoral advisor) runs as follows:
Stephen Bloch -> Sam Buss -> Simon Kuchen -> Alonzo Church ->
Oswald Veblen -> E.H. Moore -> H.A. Newton -> Michael Chasles -> Simeon
Poisson -> Joseph Lagrange -> Leonhard Euler -> Johann Bernoulli ->
Jacob Bernoulli -> Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz
according to the Mathematics Genealogy
Project.
The two preeminent professional societies for computer scientists are the Association for Computing Machinery and the somewhat more academically-focused Computing Research Association. Within the ACM, the Special Interest Group on Algorithms and Computation Theory, or ACM SIGACT, concentrates on my area of theoretical computer science.
One of the main professional societies for mathematicians is the American Mathematical Society. Within my mathematical specialty of mathematical logic, the main professional society is the Association for Symbolic Logic.
I spend a significant amount of my time advising students on course
selection, graduate schools, and careers.
For course selection, computer science students are of course welcome
to talk to me in my office hours or by appointment, but you can get a lot
of the information you need from
the CS Program
requirements and the department's
schedules
for upcoming semesters.
Students considering graduate school in computer science should look at the CRA's information resources page, which includes a complete list of Ph.D.-granting computer science programs in North America and a database of information about those departments, so you can decide which would meet your needs.
The Math/CS Department has a job board,
maintained by AfterCollege Job Resource, where you can post your resume and look at job postings that employers
have brought to our attention.
Here's a list of career centers and job
recruiters, for the benefit of students looking for jobs. The
Association for Computing Machinery
also provides a list of (largely, but not entirely, academic) job ads,
as well as career counseling and
resume-posting services for members (I think; I haven't tried it).
For those considering academic jobs, I can also point you to
the Computing Research Association and
the Chronicle
for Higher Education Job Page.
I serve as Faculty Advisor to the
Adelphi Computer Club,
one of whose current projects is a
Web server for Adelphi student
organizations.
The Club is also planning to become an official Student Chapter of the ACM
some day.
I'm also Faculty Advisor and Coach for the Adelphi team in the
ACM Intercollegiate Computer
Programming Contest. We've participated in the Greater New York
Regional Contest each year since 1994 (maybe earlier, but I wasn't here
then).
An enormous list of related reading is at Herman Tavani's Bibliography of Computing, Ethics, and Social Responsibility, and a series of reports on integrating ethical and social issues into computer science education is at the ImpactCS Page.
In the run-up to the 2004 elections, I did some amateur research on Presidents and budget deficits; here are my latest findings.
I live in Richmond Hill, Queens, New York; if you're coming to visit, see
these directions.
On July 8, 1995, I was married to
Deborah Peters.
At right is a picture of Deborah with Odo, our
first retired racing greyhound, who departed this life in October, 2003.
Our second,
Basbeaux, passed on in August, 2004.
We have two more -- Ludo and Thibaut -- but they don't have Web pages
yet.
We've written a page of
pictures and information about our greyhounds.
We started a low-carb diet in April 2003. We both quickly lost a bunch of weight and several clothing sizes, and have kept them off for a year or more; I also saw my blood cholesterol improve (after a brief spike). But I really like baking and eating bread, so I came up with a high-protein, high-fiber, low-carb bread recipe; use it in good health.
Many of my hobbies at the moment involve re-creating various aspects of
everyday life in the Middle Ages and Renaissance,
particularly music, cooking, dance, and tent design. I serve as Webmaster
for the Crown Province of Østgarðr,
the greater New York City area chapter of the
Society for Creative Anachronism.
I'm also a member of the 14th-century living history troupe
La Belle Compagnie
and the tourneying company
The Company of St.
Michael (where my wife and I provide shawm music to accompany
tourneys and pageants).