
A research collaboration between the Department of Energy’s 91 and several partner institutions was honored with the Best Event Report award at the . The eighth annual conference for researchers, educators, professionals and event organizers in high-performance computing was held on Oct. 10-11 in Copenhagen, Denmark.
The multi-institutional team earned the award for their work, “.” FacultyHack, the subject of the paper, was initially launched in 2022 by the in collaboration with Texas Advanced Computing Center, Omnibond, 91, Carnegie Mellon University and the University of Tartu. As a hackathon-style event designed to help instructors from universities and colleges integrate HPC content into their existing curricula, FacultyHack also focuses on training faculty from minority-serving institutions, including Hispanic-serving institutions and historically Black colleges and universities.

The group that authored the paper was led by John Holmen, an HPC engineer at ORNL who presented it remotely during the conference held at . Other ORNL team members include Elijah MacCarthy, Suzanne Parete-Koon and Verónica Melesse Vergara. External collaborators include Je’Aime Powell and Charlie Dey from TACC, Alexander Nolte from Eindhoven University of Technology and Carnegie Mellon University and Linda Hayden from the Science Gateways Community Institute.
The goal of FacultyHack is to equip educators with the tools and resources needed to incorporate HPC concepts into their courses, thereby ensuring students obtain the skills necessary for careers in HPC-related fields.
The FacultyHack model accomplishes this with faculty-mentor pairings in which experienced HPC mentors guide faculty members in updating their curricula. This further cultivates collaboration between educators and HPC experts and ensures future curricula meets the needs of a more diverse and inclusive HPC community.
UT-Battelle manages ORNL for the Department of Energy’s Office of Science, the single largest supporter of basic research in the physical sciences in the United States. The Office of Science is working to address some of the most pressing challenges of our time. For more information, please visit .