The Partnership for Integration of Computation into Undergraduate Physics (PICUP) seeks to expand the role of computation in the undergraduate physics curriculum. Its projects facilitate the integration of computation by helping faculty transform their own course materials. In this tutorial we will discuss the importance of integrating computation into the physics curriculum and guide participants in discussing and planning how they would integrate computation into their courses. The PICUP partnership has developed materials for a variety of physics courses in a variety of platforms including C/C++, Fortran, Python/Jupyter Notebooks, Octave/MATLAB, and Mathematica. Participants will receive information on the computational materials that have been developed, ways to tailor the materials to their own classes, and available faculty opportunities and support through the PICUP partnership. Please bring a laptop computer with the software of your choice.
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Does anyone have examples of job ads (particularly from outside the scientific computing domain) where the aim was to recruit folk in to get them using Jupyter (or RStudio/Rmd etc) to help start an internal cultural shift to using these tools more widely in a group perhaps dominated by longstanding (and expert) Excel usage?