Students: Sign up now for ISC STEM Student Day in Frankfurt

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Registration for the ISC STEM Student Day program is now open. As part of the ISC 2018 conference, the full-day program is free of charge and takes place June 27 in Frankfurt, Germany.

We have created a program to welcome science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) students into the world of HPC, demonstrate how technical skills in this area can propel your future career, introduce you to the current job landscape, and show you what the HPC workforce will look like in 2020 and beyond.

So far, close to 130 regional and international applications have been received. The program can admit a total of 200 participants. The enthusiastic response underlines the value of offering STEM degree students a program that gives them an early insight into the field of high performance computing and the important players in the sector. Businesses looking for talent to hire or universities considering candidates for their postgraduate degree programs will benefit from being a part of the ISC STEM Student Day & Gala.

The STEM Student Day & Gala will kick off with a morning tutorial on HPC, machine learning and data analytics. Other important elements of the program include a tour of the exhibition, the Wednesday keynote address delivered by Dr. Thomas Sterling, and the HPC career fair and dinner at a nearby hotel.

Due to space constraints, the tutorial can only admit 70 attendees, but the rest of the program is open to 200 students. Interested applicants are encouraged to sign up through the website as soon as possible. Those accepted will receive a notification in the month of May, which gives them free admission to the program and the Wednesday conference.

The current applicants are enrolled in various degree programs, including meteorology, physics, computer science, mathematics, biosciences, biochemistry, machine learning for neuroscience, computer engineering, computational physics, automation engineering, biology, chemistry, climate science, engineering cybernetics, business IT, and molecular biotechnology.

Every employer in the HPC sector hopes to find qualified work force, but many STEM graduates are not entering high performance computing, as they aren’t all that aware of the career opportunities in this field. Many universities still don’t integrate high performance computing as a module in their existing curriculum, which put the students and the HPC sector at a disadvantage,” said Nages Sieslack from ISC. “When I presented this disparity to the ISC management, they fully supported me in establishing this program. As conference organizers, it is our hope to enable more students to attend the ISC STEM Student Day & Gala in the future. Besides providing the students free registration, networking opportunities, meals and career advice, we hope to help them achieve a realistic impression of this challenging field and its tight-knit community.”

The STEM program is sponsored by PRACE, Fraunhofer ITWM, Hyperion Research, Intersect360 Research, ATOS, ICHEC, Leibniz Supercomputing Centre, NAG, RIKEN R-CCS, Goethe Universität Frankfurt am Main and HiPEAC step forward to support this year’s STEM Student Day & Gala.

If you are interested in the attendee demographics or sponsoring the ISC STEM Day & Gala in the future, please contact josiah.tabor@isc-group.com.

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