Forty years in research

How time flies.

I realized this month that I have been involved in academic research for four decades. Indeed, I started getting involved in computer-science forty years ago today. At the time, I was a senior undergraduate computer-science major at Dartmouth College. On the first day of my final term (spring term) before graduation, I started a part-time job as a research assistant to Professor Donald Johnson. His expertise was wide-ranging, and as I recall my task was to write Mesa code for some database experiments using a brand-new lab stocked with Xerox desktop computers. I learned a lot that term!

By the end of that summer I was at Duke University for a PhD in Computer Science. I am especially grateful to my advisor, Professor Carla Ellis, for guiding me through the PhD and for imparting so many valuable lessons, tangible and intangible, that have allowed me a successful career.

When I returned to join the faculty at Dartmouth, five years later, I became a colleague of Don Johnson – my prior research mentor – and Scot Drysdale, the first computer scientist at Dartmouth and indeed the first professor I’d met as a freshman at Dartmouth in 1982. I deeply appreciate their advice and mentorship during my early years as a professor.

Thank you to the many students and colleagues who I’ve had the pleasure of working with over these past decades. We’ve done a lot of great research together!

040 years on the faculty

The power of two.

1991(?) – photo by Dartmouth College

Like most people, I find round numbers appealing. There is a reason people celebrate events like a “tenth anniversary” or “fiftieth birthday” as somehow more special than others. So today, on the first day of classes, I am celebrating a special anniversary … joining the faculty of Computer Science here at Dartmouth 040 years ago. In other words, I have spent 0x20 years on the faculty! For readers who are not accustomed to thinking in octal (base 8) or hexadecimal (base 16), I have spent 32 years on the faculty. We computer scientists love powers of 2. 🙂

Thirty years

Thirty years on the Dartmouth faculty.

David Kotz 1994, Dartmouth College

Today marks the 30th anniversary of my return to Dartmouth to join the faculty. In July 1991 I became an Assistant Professor of Mathematics and Computer Science, one of only a handful of computer scientists on the faculty. In those early years I repeatedly experienced two odd reactions when I met other faculty on campus: (1) they mistook me for a grad student, or (2) they thought I was from the computing services (I.T.) organization and worked maybe at the help desk or as a programmer. Indeed, at the time, few on campus even recognized “computer science” as an academic discipline.

Dartmouth (and I) have changed a lot in three decades – my original office building (Bradley) was torn down years ago, along with the central computer center (Kiewit); Mathematics and Computer Science are now two separate departments; I am now the most-senior member of the CS faculty; and nobody seems to mistake me for a student any more. ;=)

Today also happens to be the day that I return to my fourth tour of duty in the administration, this time to spend a year as Interim Provost. I look forward to the opportunity to give back to an institution that has given me so much for so many years.