- Mr. Svetlik
ACSL has offered a unique programming competition for 36
years. Here are some excellent reasons to participate this year:
- ACSL contests are conducted at your local school or
institution throughout the year.
- All of your students can compete and be successful, not
just a very few.
- All necessary preparation materials are supplies as soon
as you register.
- The contest allows for various experience levels - Junior,
Intermediate, and Senior.
- The Classroom Division provides a non-programming version
of the contest.
- Programs can be written in any language(s) that the
students know how to use.
- ACSL can extend the actual curriculum in computer science
or be used as an extracurricular activity.
- New, creative contest questions and programming problems are
used every year.
- Previous years' contest questions are able to be purchased
for extra practice.
- Important Computer Science topics such as Boolean Algebra,
Graph Theory, Computer Number Systems, and Data Structures are introduced.
- Prizes are awarded on a regional basis to top scoring
students and teams during the year.
- Fast e-mail response is provided for all questions and
concerns.
- Sample student-written programs in
several languages are provided after each contest.
- The level of programming increases in difficulty as the
year progresses starting with only IF-THEN statements for the first contest.
- ACSL has sponsored regional contests continuously since
1978 and is now international.
- There is an annual All-Star Contest that is hosted at a different
location every year and this year it is in Orlando, FL!
- ACSL is on the Approved Activities List of the National
Association of Secondary School Principals.
- ACSL is an institutional member of CSTA.
- All of the ACSL team members have been high school
Computer Science teachers.
If you are interested in participating in the ACSL contests,
please visit our web site www.acsl.org, read
the 'How the ACSL Works' link and view the 'Sample Questions' link. All
questions about ACSL can be sent to Jerry Tebrow @ jerry@acsl.org.
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