J Scott Hawker Headshot

J Scott Hawker

Adjunct Faculty

Golisano College of Computing and Information Sciences

585-475-2705
Office Location

J Scott Hawker

Adjunct Faculty

Golisano College of Computing and Information Sciences

Education

BS, MS, Texas Technical University; Ph.D., Lehigh University

585-475-2705

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Published Conference Proceedings
Hawker, Scott and E.S. Mesh. "Scientific Software Process Improvement Decisions: A Proposed Research Strategy." Proceedings of the 2013 5th International Workshop on Software Engineering for Computational Science and Engineering. n.p., 2013. Print.
Mesh, Erika S. and J. Scott Hawker. "Scientific Software Process Improvement Decisions: A Proposed Research Strategy." Proceedings of the 2013 Fifth International Workshop on Software Engineering for Computational Science and Engineering. Ed. Jeffrey Carver. San Francisco, CA: IEEE, 2013. Print.
Published Article
Hawker, J. Scott et al. “An Integrated Model to Study Environmental, Economic, and Energy Trade-Offs in Intermodal Freight Transportation,” iEMSs International Congress on Environmental Modelingand Software. 2010. n.p. Web. "  É  *

Currently Teaching

SWEN-561
3 Credits
The first course in a two-course, senior-level, capstone project experience. Students work as part of a team to develop solutions to problems posed by either internal or external customers. Problems may require considerable software development or evolution and maintenance of existing software products. Culminates with the completion and presentation of the first major increment of the project solution. Students must have co-op completed to enroll.
SWEN-562
3 Credits
This is the second course in a two-course, senior-level capstone project experience. Students submit one or more additional increments that build upon the solution submitted at the end of the first course. Students make major presentations for both customers as well as technical-oriented audiences, turn over a complete portfolio of project-related artifacts and offer an evaluation of the project and team experience.
SWEN-746
3 Credits
Software models help the software engineer to understand, specify, and analyze software requirements, designs, and implementations (code components, databases, support files, etc.). Model-driven development is a software engineering practice that uses tool-enabled transformation of requirements models to design models and then to code and associated implementation artifacts. Students will use the Unified Modeling Language (UML) and other modeling techniques to capture software requirements, designs, and implementations. Students will also use formal modeling methods to semi-automatically transform among the various models and to study the quality attributes of the modeled software, such as performance, reliability, security, and other qualities.
SWEN-780
3 - 6 Credits
This course provides the student with an opportunity to explore a project-based research experience that advances knowledge in that area. The student selects a research problem, conducts background research, develops the system, analyses the results, and builds a professional document and presentation that disseminates the project. The report must include an in-depth research report on a topic selected by the student and in agreement with the student's adviser. The report must be structured as a conference paper, and must be submitted to a conference selected by the student and his/her adviser.