A relative聽newcomer to campus, the ATLAS Institute's聽genesis and evolution span a聽20-year period, and many of the prime movers responsible for establishing the organization remain involved in CU 麻豆影院 and ATLAS today. This timeline attempts to touch聽on turning points and key accomplishments.聽
1997
ATLAS (Alliance for Technology, Learning and Society) forms聽
The ideas around the ATLAS Institute coalesce聽in the late 1990s in conversations between 麻豆影院 campus Chancellor Richard L. Byyny and Vice Provost for Academic and Campus Technology and Chief Information Officer Bobby Schnabel. Recognizing the growing importance of computing and information technologies in every field, and in the practices of higher education, Byyny and Schnabel envision聽a center that broadens the benefits of the information age by providing multidisciplinary curricular, research and outreach programs that integrate information technology with a wide variety of disciplines and people, both inside and outside the university.
Following a campus-wide academic strategic planning process that involved administrators, faculty and students from every school and college, as well as internal and external advisory boards, ATLAS is formed in 1997. A steering committee forms to manage planning and implementation of the new ATLAS initiative. Bobby Schnabel is named the first ATLAS director. A faculty member since 1977, Schnabel served as chair of the Department of Computer Science from 1990 to 1995 and as Associate Dean for Academic Affairs in the College of Engineering and Applied Science from 1995 to 1997."
1998
Evaluation and Research Group founded聽
Lecia Barker is named director of the newly formed ATLAS Evaluation and Research Group. The group collaborates with faculty, scientists and outreach partners in conducting evaluations and research in increasing participation of under-represented groups in the information technology workforce, technology curricula, student technology use, information technology in instruction, digital libraries, and the development and use of web-based, self-contained learning modules.
External聽Advisory Board established
The ATLAS Advisory Board is created, composed of prominent business and technology leaders from Colorado and the nation. The board meets quarterly and plays a major role in ATLAS鈥 strategic planning and external relations.
Technology, Arts and Media program proposed
Two campus-wide committees, drawn from every school and college, explore the possibilities for the creation of the Technology, Arts and Media (TAM) program. One committee plans curriculum; one creates initial multidisciplinary projects courses for the TAM program. Diane Sieber, an assistant professor in the Department of Spanish and Portuguese, becomes the first TAM director. David Schaal becomes the first ever TAM instructor. The TAM undergraduate certificate program is created in 1999.
ATLAS Center program plan envisions building
A campuswide committee of deans and faculty members unveils the ATLAS Center Program Plan, which envisions an ATLAS building to house interdisciplinary, active-learning instructional programs; a design studio approach to teaching and learning; performance and production studios; educational technology support, and facilities for the Technology, Arts and Media program and the Film Studies program.
1999
First Technology, Arts and Media (TAM) student graduates聽
Nathalie Nunez becomes the first Technology, Arts and Media (TAM) program graduate. She later moves into a career as a graphic artist, web designer and silkscreen teacher for Warehouse 21, a Santa Fe, New Mexico聽youth center that provides an arts community for a mix of teens from different cultures, sub-cultures and socio-economic backgrounds. She becomes the first alumna member of the external ATLAS Advisory Board in January 2006.
2000
Diane Sieber named co-director of ATLAS聽
Diane Sieber, the first director of the Technology, Arts and Media (TAM) program, is named co-director of ATLAS with Bobby Schnabel. A member of ATLAS planning committees since 1997, Sieber received her master鈥檚 degree and PhD聽in romance languages and literatures from Princeton University and is an associate professor in the CU 麻豆影院 Department of Spanish and Portuguese.
Tuskegee University partnership
With a $450,000 grant from the National Science Foundation, ATLAS and Tuskegee University 鈥 a predominately black university in Alabama 鈥 forge a faculty and student exchange agreement. The agreement allows the two institutions to share research, technology, curricula and cultures and allows the 麻豆影院 campus to share its ATLAS program and accompanying curriculum for the Technology, Arts and Media (TAM) certificate program.
Jim and Becky Roser donate $2.25 million for ATLAS Center聽
Jim and Becky Roser, co-chairs of the external ATLAS Advisory Board, donate $2.25 million toward the construction of the new ATLAS building. Jim Roser is a partner in Roser Ventures L.L.C., a 麻豆影院-based venture capital firm. Becky Roser is a CU 麻豆影院 graduate, member of the CU 麻豆影院聽Music Advisory Board, the CU Foundation Board and a former director of the Speech, Language and Hearing Sciences Clinic at CU 麻豆影院.
2001
Plans, drawings unveiled for new ATLAS building聽
The 麻豆影院 Campus Planning Commission reviews plans and drawings of the new ATLAS building, to be located on the north half of the Hunter Science Building. The building would be two stories below ground and three stories above ground and will host ATLAS programs and include an experimental performance studio.
Campus committee proposes ATLAS as an institute
A campus-wide committee reviews proposals for campus information technology initiatives involving ATLAS and other parts of the university. One proposal is to designate ATLAS as an institute. Another would create a new college, combining ATLAS and computer science; a third proposal would combine ATLAS and computer science within a new school in the College of Engineering and Applied Science.
Slumping state economy delays ATLAS building construction
State lawmakers, facing tough decisions within a bleak outlook for the state鈥檚 economy, delay several higher education construction projects, including construction of the new ATLAS building. The state funds the demolition of the Hunter Science Building, which is the first phase of the ATLAS construction project. Demolition begins in December 2002.
Colorado Institute of Technology funds ATLAS educational program
The Colorado Institute of Technology awards ATLAS $197,000 to fund ATLAS courses that emphasize computer-programming and technical skills to supplement the Technology, Arts and Media certificate program. These courses help create the Multidisciplinary Applied Technologies program within ATLAS and TAM.
2002-2003
Center for Women and Information Technology (NCWIT) forms聽
Leaders from ATLAS, education, government and industry propose a national coalition among academic, industry, and social institutions to address the shortage of women and girls in information technology fields. The result is the National Center for Women and Information Technology (NCWIT). ATLAS becomes a co-founder of NCWIT along with Lucy Sanders, who has worked in R&D and executive positions at AT&T Bell Labs, Lucent Bell Labs and Avaya Labs. Sanders becomes chief executive officer of NCWIT and an executive-in-residence for ATLAS. The National Science Foundation awards NCWIT $3.25 million in 2004.
Digital CUrrents Summer Workshop program created
Several units of ATLAS collaborate in research and outreach to seek ways to increase the participation of girls, women and minorities in information technology fields. The Evaluation and Research Group receives a $400,000 grant from the National Science Foundation for research to increase interest in technology careers among middle-school girls in Denver and nationwide. The National Center for Women in Information Technology coordinates the annual Digital CUrrents summer workshop program, which involves a team of university and high school faculty, Denver high school and middle school students (largely from underrepresented minority groups), and research activities on the effective use of information technology in K-12 education. The effort is assisted by a Colorado Institute of Technology grant totaling $45,000 in 2004.
Funding for higher education construction projects cut
State lawmakers, facing tough economic times, do not fund several higher education projects, including the construction of the ATLAS building.
2002
ATLAS Forms Partnership with Dillard University
ATLAS forms a partnership with Dillard University, a historically black liberal arts college in New Orleans, following a $550,000 grant from the Carnegie Foundation to establish a 15-month demonstration project, titled 鈥淟iberal Arts Curriculum in a Technological Age.鈥 The partnership involves sharing course materials in calculus and humanities using web-based technologies and video-conferencing. The Carnegie Foundation suppports the partnership with an additional $350,000 grant.
2003
ATLAS wins top award from EDUCAUSE聽
EDUCAUSE, a national nonprofit organization dedicated to advancing the use of technology in education, awards ATLAS the 鈥淪ystemic Progress in Teaching and Learning鈥 award, one of the highest awards given by EDUCAUSE.
ATLAS becomes an institute
Chancellor Richard L. Byyny approves the proposal to formally designate ATLAS as an institute鈥攖he first new institute on campus in 35 years. The designation specifies the structural role of the organization and enables ATLAS to host centers and establish a program of faculty affiliations. The Board of Regents concurs, and ATLAS Institute is born.
Technology, Arts and Media certificate program grows
The Technology, Arts and Media (TAM) program graduates 27 students; the program, created in 1999, now enrolls about 200 students. The ATLAS Collaborative Arts, Media and Performance program is created through a collaboration between art, film, journalism, music, theater and dance聽and other disciplines. The campus-wide program is charged with creating interdisciplinary curriculum and creative work and new academic programs in the proposed ATLAS building.
2004
CU 麻豆影院 student government funds ATLAS building聽
The student government at the 麻豆影院 approves phased-in student fees to help fund the construction of buildings on campus, including the new ATLAS building. The fees, which begin at $100 a year and increase to $400 a year over a three-year period, are approved by the CU Board of Regents.
ATLAS cited for promoting diversity
The ATLAS Institute receives a Chancellor鈥檚 Advisory Committee for Minority Affairs Service Recognition Award for its work to promote diversity on campus and beyond. The award recognizes the continuing efforts of ATLAS to create a diverse and supportive learning, working and living environment, as well as the institute鈥檚 commitment to promote understanding of multicultural issues.
Faculty Fellows program inaugurated
Seventeen faculty members from a wide variety of campus departments are selected as founding ATLAS Faculty Fellows. The purpose is to provide overall guidance for future directions, and to participate in multidisciplinary teaching, learning, research and outreach activities related to information technology.
New faculty joins ATLAS
Aileen Pierce (Fall), Ian Hales (Fall)
2005
ATLAS PhD聽program proposed聽
The ATLAS Fellows propose a PhD聽program in Technology, Media and Society. The program, intended for highly motivated students whose interdisciplinary interests at the intersections of technology, media and society are not met well by traditional PhD聽programs, would involve dozens of faculty from disciplines ranging from the arts, humanities and social sciences to the sciences, engineering, business and law. The CU Board of Regents approves the degree in October 2006.
Jim Johnson becomes director of Collaborative Media, Arts and Performance program
Jim Johnson, a former chair of the Department of Art and Art History, becomes director of the Collaborative Arts, Media and Performance program for ATLAS. He works with faculty across campus to create an interdisciplinary curriculum within the production and performance studios in the proposed ATLAS building. The program becomes a center in 2006, when it is renamed the Center for Media, Arts and Performance.
Groundbreaking held for ATLAS building聽
A multimedia groundbreaking for the $31 million ATLAS building is held in January. The area of the building housing the campus鈥櫬爌rograms to enhance the quality of teaching and learning is named the Byyny Teaching and Learning Center. The naming honors the leadership, inspiration and vision for ATLAS provided by Chancellor Richard L. Byyny, and his emphasis on the practice and scholarship of the highest quality teaching and learning at CU 麻豆影院.
New faculty joins ATLAS
Joel Swanson聽(Spring)
2006
ATLAS center opens聽
Construction of the $31 million, 66,000-square-foot Roser ATLAS Center is completed; the building opens in August. Funding for the building includes $20.7 million from the student-approved annual fee; $3 million in federal funding; $1.6 million from the state, and $6 million from private fundraising, including the $2.25 million donation from the Rosers. A plaque honoring the student fee support for the building is placed in the ATLAS lobby. The student plaque states: 鈥淭he ATLAS building was constructed with student fees and is dedicated to students of the University of Colorado at 麻豆影院. The University of Colorado Student Union made this building possible by going above and beyond its duties to support a capital construction fee when traditional sources were limited.鈥 Some 6,000 students study in the building each semester. An open house celebrating the new building is held Oct. 13.
ATLAS Center Gets Gold Environmental Rating
The ATLAS building achieves the U.S.聽Green Building Council鈥檚 gold rating under its Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED) program, the U.S. benchmark for the design, construction and operation of high-performance green buildings. To achieve a gold rating, a building must meet high standards, including sustainable site development; water-saving features; high levels of energy efficiency; use of green construction materials; extensive recycling of construction waste; and high indoor environmental quality.
2007
John Bennett Named ATLAS Director聽
John Bennett, associate dean of engineering and applied science and an ATLAS Board member who helped create the ATLAS PhD聽program, in 2006, becomes the director of ATLAS. Bennett, the Archuleta Professor of Computer Science, holds joint faculty appointments in electrical and computer engineering and interdisciplinary telecommunications. He holds bachelor鈥檚 and master鈥檚 degrees from Rice University in electrical and computer engineering and a doctorate in computer science from the University of Washington, Seattle.
Joel Swanson Named Director of TAM Program
Joel Swanson, an artist and instructor in the Technology, Arts and Media (TAM) program, is named curriculum director of the TAM program. A TAM graduate himself, Swanson later received an MFA in digital art at the University of California, San Diego. His works include installations, both physical and virtual, that explore the nature of language and its embodiment.
Rebekah West Named Director of Center for Arts, Media and Performance
Rebekah West, a multimedia artist whose creative works include theater, dance, video, television, photography and writing, is named director of the Center for Arts, Media and Performance. Her experience also includes 10 years as producing director of the Space for Dance Theatre/麻豆影院 Dance Alliance.
2008
Jill Van Matre named associate director of ATLAS聽
Jill Van Matre is named the associate director of ATLAS. Van Matre has a law degree from the 麻豆影院 and a bachelor鈥檚 degree in finance and international studies from Indiana University. Prior to law school, she worked for Lucent Technologies and Microsoft Corporation. Van Matre, a research fellow with CU 麻豆影院's聽Silicon Flatirons Center for Law, Technology and Entrepreneurship, leads the ATLAS PhD聽seminar. She also teaches a writing seminar in the Interdisciplinary Telecommunications Program.聽
ATLAS confers first PhD
Revi Sterling graduates in December with the ATLAS Institute鈥檚 first doctorate degree in Technology, Media and Society. Sterling鈥檚 dissertation on advancement through interactive radio deals with efforts to link disadvantaged Kenyan women with local community radio stations and other community-based resources such as non-governmental organizations and extension programs. Sterling accepts a position as director and developer of the new ATLAS master鈥檚 degree program in Information and Communication for Development (ICTD).
ATLAS board holds retreat
Members of the ATLAS Advisory Board and ATLAS staff generate ideas about future directions for ATLAS during a retreat at Devil鈥檚 Thumb Ranch in Tabernash, Colorado. ATLAS Associate Director Jill Van Matre facilitated a discussion of graduate education and research; Advisory Board member and Computer Science professor Clayton Lewis聽illustrated possible directions for undergraduate education; ATLAS Outreach Director Lucy Sanders directed discussion about outreach; and Center for Arts, Media and Performance Director Rebekah West facilitated discussion about the center.
2009
Michael Theodore becomes director of Center for Media, Arts and Performance聽
Michael Theodore, associate professor of composition in the College of Music, is appointed director of the ATLAS Center for Arts, Media and Performance. Theodore is a composer, visual artist and technologist. He has studied at the New England Conservatory, Amherst College, the Yale School of Music and the University of California San Diego. Theodore has taught music composition and interactive technology and has been involved with ATLAS as a CU 麻豆影院 faculty member since 1998 and worked with others on campus to help create the center. The center鈥檚 mission is to foster interdisciplinary curriculum and creative works involving technology and the arts. The center later is renamed the Center for Media, Arts and Performance.
2010
Master of Science in Information and Communication Technology for Development Launches (MS-ICTD)聽
The ATLAS master鈥檚 degree in Information and Communication Technology for Development launches with seven students entering the program for the fall. The MS-ICTD degree prepares students for careers in the use of Information and Communication Technology (ICT) to advance people and communities in developing nations and underserved or impoverished regions. The two-year program includes three semesters in residence and a one-semester practicum in an internship or service project with a company engaged in ICTD efforts. Revi Sterling, the first ATLAS PhD聽graduate, is the founding director of the program.
Technology, Arts and Media program expands with new minor degree
The Technology, Arts and Media (TAM) program adds a 21-credit minor degree option as well as a certificate in Digital Media. The minor provides a broad multidisciplinary perspective that integrates technological skills with a critical, theoretical and historical understanding of technology, media and the arts. The certificate provides a fundamental understanding of information technology and digital media production and motivates students to think critically about technology and its impacts upon society.
ATLAS is Gold Academic Sponsor of Grace Hopper Celebration of Women and Computing
Ten women from the ATLAS Technology, Arts and Media program, the new Master of Science in Information and Communication Technology for Development, and the PhD聽program in Technology, Media and Society attend the 2010 Grace Hopper Celebration of Women and Computing. The event is the premier annual gathering of technical women from industry, academia and government laboratories, drawing approximately 2,000 people. ATLAS is one of three Gold Academic Sponsors of the conference.
New faculty joins ATLAS
Kevin Hoth
2011
ATLAS building named in honor of Roser family聽
The ATLAS building is named the Roser ATLAS Center in honor of the generous support and leadership of the Roser Family, and in particular Becky Roser and the late Jim Roser, who were the founding co-chairs of the ATLAS Advisory Board.聽
BDW Post-Digital Studio program becomes part of ATLAS
BDW (formerly 麻豆影院 Digital Works) becomes a post-digital studio within the ATLAS Institute. It offers multi-disciplinary, project-based graduate programs, providing聽skills needed in the digital communication fields. It also offers intensive immersion programs in digital fluency for working professionals and other programs and workshops. The program started in 2009 as a partnership between the School of Journalism and Mass Communication, CU 麻豆影院's聽Division of Continuing Education, and Toronto-based MDC Partners, the parent company of 麻豆影院 advertising agency Crispin Porter + Bogusky. David Slayden, associate professor of advertising, is executive director of BDW. Michael Lightner, chair of the CU 麻豆影院 Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, is technology director of BDW.
TAM offers first Maymester Digital Media Bootcamp
The Technology, Arts and Media (TAM) program expands by offering the first intensive three-week introduction to digital media production called Digital Media Bootcamp. The course, part of the university鈥檚 Maymester program, offers practical technological skills to people from any industry or discipline. The program aims to give students and industry professionals the necessary skills to design and develop digital media.
2012
ATLAS celebrates premiere of 麻豆影院 Box Set on Rocky Mountain PBS聽
麻豆影院 70 people attended the celebration of the premiere of 麻豆影院 Box Set, a music series collaboration between the ATLAS Institute and Rocky Mountain PBS, in July. 麻豆影院 Box Set features performances by established and up-and-coming musicians captured with the high definition/high fidelity technology of the ATLAS Black Box theater. The shows highlight the creativity, energy and spontaneity of live performance in an intimate venue. Among the guests were award-winning LA-based musicians Andy Hill and Ren茅e Safier, whose one-hour show was the first in the series to be broadcast on Rocky Mountain PBS. Also attending were Colorado bassist Chris Engleman (eTown), who was among the accomplished musicians backing Hill and Safier in the first show, and Grammy-award winning composer, producer and keyboardist Don Grusin, who composed original theme music.
ATLAS awards first Master of Science in ICTD
The ATLAS Institute awards its first Master of Science degrees in Information and Communication Technology for Development (MS-ICTD) during May graduation ceremonies that were split into two parts to accommodate the friends and family of 119 graduate and undergraduate students. Receiving the master degrees were Matthew Crum, Kevin McElhinney and Nicole Stephan. Two students 鈥 Edwige Simon and Sarah Vieweg 鈥 were awarded ATLAS PhD聽degrees in Technology, Media and Society. Fifty-six students received the ATLAS minor in Technology, Arts and Media; another 58 received ATLAS Certificates in Digital Media.
Diane Sieber named associate dean for education in College of Engineering and Applied Science
Diane Sieber, the inaugural director of the ATLAS Technology, Arts and Media program and co-director of ATLAS from 2000 to 2007, is appointed associate dean for education in the College of Engineering &聽Applied Science. Since leaving her TAM position, Sieber has been director and associate professor in the Herbst Program of Humanities in Engineering. The Anita Borg Institute for Women and Technology awards its Women of Vision Social Impact award to Revi Sterling, director of the ATLAS master鈥檚 degree in Information and Communications Technologies for Development (ICTD), during an awards banquet in Santa Clara, California. Women of Vision award winners are selected from leading women in technology professions in industry, academia, NGOs or government.
2013
ATLAS becomes part of the College of Engineering and Applied Science, Graduate School聽
The ATLAS Institute becomes part of the College of Engineering &聽Applied Science and the 麻豆影院 graduate school in January. 鈥淭he New Year has brought the College of Engineering and Applied Science a new partner,鈥 Robert H. Davis, dean of the College of Engineering and Applied Science, announced in an email. 鈥淪tarting this semester, our college will provide an academic home for most of the ATLAS programs, faculty and staff.鈥 Davis noted that ATLAS, its faculty and staff will continue to be housed in the Roser ATLAS building, as will the Center for Media, Arts and Performance. 鈥淎s campus-wide assets, the administrative oversight of the ATLAS building and CMAP will roll up under the graduate school, rather than engineering,鈥 Davis said. He noted that ATLAS, which was founded in 1997, currently is directed by John Bennett, a computer science professor, and that ATLAS earlier was headed by Bobby Schnabel, also a computer science professor, and Diane Sieber, currently an associate dean for education and director of the Herbst Program of Humanities in the College of Engineering &聽Applied Science. Jill Van Matre Dupre, who has been the associate director of ATLAS since 2008, becomes the acting director of the ATLAS Institute in July. She is a graduate of the 麻豆影院 School of Law and is a member of the Colorado Bar Association. Prior to law school, Dupre worked for Lucent Technologies and Microsoft Corporation. Her research includes alternative dispute resolution and the use of mediation to resolve disputes in interdisciplinary fields; information privacy; data lifecycles; Internet sociology; transmedia storytelling; leadership; and innovation.
2014
Mark D. Gross appointed director
Mark D. Gross, a professor of computational design at Carnegie Mellon University who taught from 1990 to 1999 in the CU architecture, planning and design program, is named director of ATLAS and a professor in the Department of Computer Science. His research interests include design methods, modular robotics, computationally enhanced construction kits and crafts, sketch tools and applications, and human interaction with computers as an increasingly common experience in many aspects of the physical world. He was a professor of computational design at Carnegie Mellon University from 2004 until his appointment as ATLAS director in January 2014. From 1999 to 2004, Gross was a professor of architecture at the University of Washington in Seattle.
2015
ATLAS launches Bachelor of Science in Technology, Arts and Media
The new program builds on the successful and popular TAM minor and certificate in digital media. 聽聽A major in the College of Engineering &聽Applied Science (CEAS), the Bachelor of Science in Technology, Arts and Media (BS-TAM) offers a broad, transdisciplinary curriculum that integrates technological skills with a critical, theoretical and historical understanding of technology, media and the arts. The BS-TAM curriculum infuses creativity into technology and integrates a technically rigorous education with critical thinking, problem solving, design and creative production. This program attracts designers, makers, tinkerers, and builders鈥攖hose with unorthodox perspectives and unconventional approaches to technology. Teaching diverse and adaptable skills, BS-TAM equips graduates to address a wide range of 21st century challenges and opportunities.
ATLAS faculty expands with multiple assistant professors
Assistant Professors Ben Shapiro and Dan Szafir join the faculty, with tenure homes in computer science, founding respectively The Laboratory for Playful Computation and Interactive Robotics and Novel Technologies (IRON) Lab. Senior Instructor Joel Swanson, advances to Assistant Professor in the Herbst Program of Humanities. 聽Matthew Bethancourt joins the faculty as an instructor.
2016听
The MS program launches a new track in Creative Technologies + Design
TAM graduate Arielle Hein joins the faculty after completing a master's degree at NYU's Interactive Telecommunications Program (ITP).
2017
ATLAS faculty continues to grow
Assistant Professor Laura Devendorf and Instructor聽Chris Carruth join the faculty. 聽Devendorf founds the Lab for Unstable Design. Assistant Professor Carson Bruns and Professor聽Ellen Yi-Luen Do join the faculty establishing the Emergent Nanomaterials Lab and the ACME Creativity聽Machine Environment (ACME) Lab respectively. A new ATLAS Working Group forms to engage external partners.
First BS TAM students graduate
The first three students to graduate with a B.S. in Technology, Media and Society receive diplomas during spring graduation ceremony.聽
2018
New Labs and Faculty
Assistant Professor Daniel Leithinger joins the faculty and establishes the Transformative Human Interfaces for the Next Generation (THING) Lab. Danny Rankin becomes an instructor at ATLAS.
狈颁奥滨罢听
Sixteen years after its formation, the National Center for Women & Information Technology becomes an independent entity under the College of Engineering &聽Applied Science, moving into new offices off-campus thanks to a six-year lease donated by Google and valued at $1.3 million.聽
2019
ATLAS expands with new faculty and labs; student enrollment soars
Assistant Professor Mirela Alistar joins the faculty and establishes the Living Matter Lab, where researchers work on compact and highly configurable digital microfluidic biochips with the potential to move a variety of complex diagnostics out of the labs and into the home. Michelle Ellsworth, professor of dance, becomes the interim director of the ATLAS Center for Media, Arts and Performance (CMAP), taking the helm from Michael Theodore, who had directed CMAP since 2009. Sheiva Rezvani, a New York-based interaction designer, artist-researcher and creative technologist, joins ATLAS as an instructor. Shaz Zamore, most recently an NSF Postdoctoral Fellow at Virginia Tech, joins ATLAS as an instructor and STEM outreach coordinator.聽
The Center for Media, Arts & Performance's (CMAP) Motion Capture (MoCap) Lab opens, enabling high-definition motion tracking within a defined space. Matt Bethancourt, senior instructor and director of undergraduate programs, and Danny Rankin, instructor, establish Whaaat!? Lab, where researchers explore new ways to bring delight to the world through games and experimental interactions. A new ATLAS wordmark,聽design firm Berger and Fohr, is adopted and rolled out.
In the fall, ATLAS academic programs enroll 16 PhD and 43 master鈥檚 students. The Creative Technology & Design track is particularly popular, accounting for 31 of the master's students.聽 Fall 2019, undergraduate enrollment includes 271 students in the TAM-BS program, 474 minors and 301 enrolled in the certificate program.
2020
ATLAS degree programs renamed Creative Technology and Design
Under Michelle Ellsworth's leadership, CMAP is renamed B2 Center for Media, Art and Performance鈥擝2 for short鈥攁nd given a聽new visual identity designed by Berger and Fohr. The COVID pandemic closes campus in March聽and聽ATLAS marks graduation with a virtual, livestreamed ceremony. Labs聽are initially closed and most classes are taught online聽through the end of the spring, 2021 semester. Steven Frost is appointed faculty director for B2 for a three-year term in the fall semester.聽Assistant Professor聽Laura Devendorf earns a prestigious NSF CAREER award.
2021
Ondine Geary is appointed managing director of聽B2. Assistant Professor聽Danielle Szafir聽earns an NSF CAREER award. The ongoing pandemic forces another virtual graduation. With the start of the fall semester, many classes return to in-person.聽ATLAS CTD master鈥檚 program continues to grow, with a record-breaking incoming class of 42 new students in fall 2021.聽Whaaat?! Festival returns to an聽in-person event.