
Robert Morris
Bio [2005]
Rob Morris recent graduated from Brown University with a bachelor's
degree in mathematical physics. His interests are in high energy
theory and theoretical cosmology. He started working with Wolfram
Research in early June of 2005 and is working toward a better
understanding of NKS. His current aspiration is to one day be a
teaching professor at a small college somewhere. Outside of physics
and NKS, he also has an interest in music. For the last few years, he
has been playing jazz and blues piano with various stints at blues
bars and in jazz bands around the country.
Project Title
Educational Implementation of NKS
Project

My project focused on how to teach NKS ideas and methodology to
children roughly between the ages of 6-13.
Some of the issues I addressed are:
- Motivations for teaching NKS
- Why do they need to know?
- Prerequisites for teaching NKS
-
What do they need to know?
- Developing fun, educational, yet effective methodology
- How are they going to learn?
To address these issues, I have concocted numerous possible
implementations. For the younger end of the age spectrum, I have
developed interactive games and activities to be played by groups of
children. For the intermediate ages in the range, I have written
lesson plans that introduce the children to simple programs and their
different classifications. For the older children, I have designed
interactive 1D and 2D cellular automaton explorers.
Favorite Four-Color, Nearest-Neighbor, Totalistic Rule

Rule chosen: 252435
I particularly like it mostly because I think it exhibits much of the
possible behavior one would hope to see in a CA--all within ~250 steps.
|