Our
brilliant girls at Grace Hopper celebration with the first female
Turing award winner Dr. Frances Allen. Photo Courtesy: Mohammad Kaykobad
This
part of the world, particularly Bangladesh, has always been fortunate
in making great starts. The first computer of Pakistan was diverted to
Chittagong port thanks to initiatives of our scientists at the Atomic
Energy Centre, Dhaka as early as 1964. This created an opportunity for
our scientists and engineers to use this versatile technology in those
days. Not only that, banks also started to get benefit of this
technology. Formal degree course in computers started at Bangladesh
University of Engineering and Technology in 1982 through the opening of
the Department of Computer Engineering. Initially postgraduate degrees
and later on programs for undergraduate degrees were offered. It was not
known how the graduates will be received in the society, and in fact it
was extremely difficult for our graduates to get programming jobs since
employers were not sure whether a CSE graduate would be able to write
programs. There was a dearth of teachers as with books and laboratory
facilities. Even then, the most meritorious students of the country
opted for this department. Deficiency of teachers and libraries were
compensated by enormous interest of students in the initial days in
learning this latest technology and earning enviable skill. Each of them
has been established as good professionals in advanced countries. Now
the department is 32 years old. Other public and private universities
have also opened computer science related departments. So it is
impossible to enumerate all the success stories in computer education
and research. I shall try to highlight those I know, possibly
unknowingly skipping some more important achievements.
BUET
graduate Areef Reza won a Java competition in the early days from the
University of Waterloo. This gave us a lot of confidence, that in spite
of many shortcomings, our students are learning and earning commendable
computer skill. In the meantime Manzur, Mostofa, Shaikat, Suman, Zia and
many others published their research findings in journals of
international repute even when they were still undergraduates. In 1997,
for the first time in the soil of Bangladesh, the Association for
Computing Machinery (ACM) International Collegiate Programming
Contest(ICPC) Asia Regional contest was held where the team of Suman,
Shaikat and Shushom qualified for participation in the prestigious
World Finals of ACM ICPC. They shared the 24th position with Stanford
University in a contest of 54 teams from round the world. This has
definitely contributed to the confidence of our students. After this
success with the initiative of enthusiast Zakaria Swapan, the first
national Computer Programming Contest (NCPC) was organised jointly by
the Daily Star and Proshkia at the then Hotel Sheraton where the then
Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina was the chief guest along with many
important ministers. That event inspires our students. Since then,
especially students of Bangladesh University of Engineering and
Technology participated in all the world finals. Meantime our students
were performing very well in internet based programming contests
organised by the University of Valladolid, Spain. Sheikh Hasina awarded a
cash prize of Taka one lakh to each of the nine students of whom eight
were from the CSE department of BUET and the other from DU. In 2000,
the BUET team occupied the 11th position in a 60-team contest leaving
behind teams of world famous universities like MIT, Stanford, Harvard,
Berkeley in the 24th world finals of ACM ICPC. Meanwhile our students
participated in the Asia region Kanpur site contest. In 1999 BUET became
the champions and DU runner up. In the same year the BUET team repeated
the feat. While universities of the 8th most populous country that is
ours fail to be in any respectable shortlist of best universities, our
students of the most advanced technology make their way into these
lists. Many of our graduates have been working as coaches of different
US universities and that too with commendable success.
Our
graduate Suman Kumar Nath got admitted into the top ranked CSE school of
Carnegie Mellon University, and is now an employee of the prestigious
institution of Microsoft Research. By now he is a very celebrated
researcher under whose leadership we could successfully complete the
first ever international conference on Networking, Systems and Security
at CSE department, BUET. The celebrated brilliant student and colleague
Mohammad Manzur Murshed started PhD education under the supervision of a
very famous professor in Richard Brent at ANU. He has created an
opportunity for some 60/70 Bangladeshi students to pursue their higher
education in a single school of Monash University. Dr Murshed's
excellence is so well-known, that he became the occasional Convocation
Speaker of Monash University when he was in his mid-thirties. We felt
enormously honoured with this success of one of our brightest graduates.
By now our graduates have gotten admitted into the finest schools
including MIT, Carnegie Mellon, Harvard, Yale, Stanford, Berkeley,
CalTech, Waterloo, Toronto and Oxford. Professor Md Saidur Rahman of our
department wrote a book in co-authorship with his supervisor Professor
Takao Nishizeki, as has done Professor MMA Hashem of KUET and Professor
Ashikur Rahman of BUET. Dr Ekram Hossain has become a professor at a
young age in Canada along with being the editor of several IEEE
Transactions. Now he is one of the youngest IEEE Fellows with a very
praiseworthy list of publications and books. Dr Zulkernine of Queens
University has become Canada Chair, while Professor Latifur Rahman Khan
of UT Dallas has become distinguished a scientist of ACM. By now more
than 50 undergraduate students have published their research findings in
international journals of repute while they were still undergraduates.
Such feats are very uncommon for any department not only in Bangladesh
but also in advanced countries. Professor Md Saidur Rahman has also
initiated a workshop named Walcom in the soil of Bangladesh. This is
being organised in tandem in Bangladesh and India, and is possibly the
first workshop whose proceedings are being published by Springer. This
year the celebrated young professor Erik Demaine of MIT has submitted
his paper and thus Walcom touched an enviable height. We started the
first international conference ICCIT series in Bangladesh with massive
participation of our undergraduate students. This conference is
flourishing day by day with Conference Chair, Professor MA Karim,
Executive Vice Chancellor and Provost of University of Massachusetts,
Dartmouth. Already 8 graduates of the CSE department, BUET have been
awarded the prestigious Fulbright scholarship since 2007-8, and we feel
deeply honoured at this achievement of our graduates. DU graduate Dr
Julius Hossain has been working in the prestigious flagship institution
of European Molecular Biology Laboratory. Back at home Professor Md
Saidur Rahman got International Funai Information Technology award,
Bangladesh Academy of Sciences Gold Medal. Dr Md Sohel Rahman and Dr
Masud Hasan also got recognition for their research excellence. Dr Md
Sohel Rahman appears to be the youngest researcher whose number of
journal publications outnumbers his age. Our brilliant computer girls
Dr Nova Ahmed, Dr Taniya Siddiqua, Dr Tanzima Zerin Islam, Dr Zalia
Shams, Awalin Sopan, Nabila Rahman, Shantonu Hossain, Dr Sonia Jahid, Dr
Farhana Dewan, Dr Shamsi Tamara Iqbal, Dr Samira Manabi Khan, Dr Sadia
Afroz, Dr Fariba Khan among others joined Grace Hopper celebration and
proved that they are not behind. Himel Dev, currently serving as a
lecturer in the Department of CSE, BUET, has become the international
winner of The Undergraduate Awards in the Computer Sciences &
Information Technology category. He was also invited to the prestigious
Heidelberg Laureate Forum participated by Turing award winners and
Fields medallists.
Students and teachers of computer science are
good not only in studies, they are also playing pioneering roles in
organising Mathematics and Informatics Olympiads throughout the country
under the great leadership of the celebrated author and educationist
Professor Md Zafar Iqbal. This has resulted in Md Abirul Islam of Dhaka
City College winning the first ever Silver Medal from the International
Olympiad in Informatics held in 2009 in Bulgaria and that too ahead of
all eight contestants from the sub-continent of which four were from
India and three from Sri Lanka. In 2012 in Italy, Dhananjoy Biswas and
Bristy Sikder won Bronze medals for us compared to a single Bronze from
India. Moreover, Bristy was awarded for being the best among female
contestants. Bangladesh has the best girl computer wizard of the world
who is now studying at MIT.
Students of advanced technology have
always placed us in the list of the top 100 universities or less. Not
only BUET, other universities like NSU, AIUB, DU, EWU and SUST have also
placed themselves in this super league. This year, Jahangirnagar
University has placed themselves into this prestigious list and SUST for
the thirds year in a row. In year 2009 there were 5 teams in ICPC
World Finals from this sub-continent of which 3 were from Bangladesh.
Not only that, the two teams that were ranked are also from the soil of
Bangladesh- BUET and DU. BUET also became runner up in Java Challenge by
beating teams of many famous universities. In addition to these our
students have earned reputation by participating in competitions
arranged by Topcoder, Codejam, Codechef and other online contests. In
2006, 100 topmost programmers of the world were selected for a contest
in New York. There was one from Bangladesh named Istiaque Ahmed of BUET
and he was adjudged 79th in the world. In recognition of this
programming skill of our students, companies like Microsoft and Google
are offering coveted jobs to our students who are yet to graduate. In
the list of offers it is not only BUET students but also students from
Jahangirnagar, DU, NSU, AIUB and NSU are getting these jobs. In recent
years Mashuq, Manzurur Rahman Khan, Sanny, Nafi, Riyad, Mahbub, Enjam,
Aumy, Pratyoi, Hafiz, Linkin, Sadia, Sakib Safayat of BUET, Protik
Mohammad Hossain, Jane Alam Jan and Aninda Majumder of DU, Sabur Zaheed
of AIUB, Arifuzzaman of JU, Muntasir Azam Khan of NSU among others have
been offered these jobs. Our students are good not only in programming.
Electronic Voting Machine designed by Imranul Hoque and Sonia Jahid
occupied the third position among thousands of projects in World
Engineers' convention held at Shanghai in 2004. MIST team showed
commendable performance at NASA Lunabotics Mining contest. These are
recognitions of the fact that our students have earned programming skill
and that quality of CSE education in Bangladesh is commendable.
30-doctoral-degree-holder
strong IIT CSE department has an intake of 45 UG students. At BUET our
intake is 120, our faculty strength is around 36/37 of which only half
are doctorate degree holders. Situation in other universities may not be
as good. Our laboratories are not enriched either. In that sense our
achievements cannot be neglected. Moreover, we also involve ourselves in
inspiring our students to organise CSE days, project Shows, programming
contests to increase ICT skill of our students.
If we want to
construct big bridges we need civil engineers, for setting up chemical
industries we need chemical engineers, for setting up hospitals we need
doctors and for making the country 'digital' we need computer educated
experts. Quacks will not make a good hospital. In the same way unless
somebody has formal computer education the chances of success in
building a large computer system is slim. Foreign experts will not be
creating Digital Bangladesh. Had it been possible then Kuwait and Saudi
Arabia would have turned digital long back. So in creating Digital
Bangladesh our young people bestowed with commendable computer expertise
should be the forerunners, universities should play the pioneering
role. Success in this work will largely depend upon how much we have
been able to induce this world class computer educated young people to
this megaproject.
The writer is a Professor, CSE Department, BUET