University of Utah School of Computing professor Robert R. Kessler, who is also co-founder of the U’s Entertainment Arts & Engineering video game development program, has been named to receive the IEEE Computer Society Computer Science and Engineering Undergraduate Teaching Award for “outstanding contributions to interdisciplinary computing education through the creation of an innovative program in Entertainment Arts and Engineering and a fruitful undergraduate teaching activity.”
Kessler just stepped down as director of the Entertainment Arts and Engineering (EAE) program at the University of Utah where he founded EAE as an undergraduate games emphasis program in 2007. Then, in 2010, EAE became an official university program with its own master’s degree. In 2017, EAE added a bachelor of science in games degree. Over the years, the program has been consistently ranked in the top five best video game design programs in the world and achieved No. 1 three times. It currently has grown to 11 faculty, 600 undergraduate and 120 graduate students.
Kessler has authored two books and over 75 journal and conference publications and has received over $16 million in external funding. He founded two startup companies and has been on several corporate boards. He is an award-winning teacher, having received the College of Engineering Outstanding Teaching Award in 2000 and the University of Utah’s highest teaching honor, the Distinguished Teaching Award in 2001.
In the early 90s, Kessler founded the Center for Software Science, a state of Utah Center of Excellence, which was a research group working in nearly all aspects of system software for sequential and parallel/distributed computers. In the late 90s, he served as chairman of the Department of Computer Science (which became the School of Computing in 2000). At about that same time, his research interests expanded into software engineering. He also dabbled in agent technologies.
Kessler earned his B.S., M.S. and Ph.D. in 1974, 1977 and 1981, respectively, all from the University of Utah. His early work centered on the portable implementation of the Lisp programming language and then distributed and parallel implementations of Lisp.
Kessler will receive his award at a dinner June 5 at the Hyatt Regency Coral Gables, Florida, during the IEEE Computer Society Board of Governors meeting.
University of Utah School of Computing professor-lecturer Joseph Zachary was the first recipient of the award when he received it in 1999.
Read more about the Computer Science and Engineering Undergraduate Teaching Award, including a list of all past recipients.