Posts

2026-07-09: Graduating from the Department of War Cyber Service Academy

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My award for my outstanding academic achievement, leadership, and successfully completing the requirements for the Department of War Cyber Service Academy I graduated from the Department of War (DoW) Cyber Service Academy (CSA) this semester (Spring 2026). I was honored to be an awardee during the inaugural DoW CSA graduation dinner at Old Dominion University (ODU).  Photo taken at the inaugural DoW CSA graduation dinner at Old Dominion University This recognition event brought the DoW CSA together with the National Science Foundation (NSF) Scholarship for Service and the Old Dominion University School of Cybersecurity . I want to thank everyone at the DoW CSA, where I have been a scholar for five years. Thank you for your support and dedication to my success. My story with the DoW CSA began in 2021 when I applied for the scholarship while taking classes to satisfy PhD course requirements. The DoW CSA is a recruitment tool for the DoW creating a pipeline of DoW future employee...

2026-06-25: 2026 WS-DL Research Expo

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On June 23, 2026,  we  held our sixth annual  WS-DL Research Expo .   We continued the same format as the prior years ( 2025 ,  2024 ,  2023 ,  2022  &  2021 ), with one student from each WS-DL professor giving a short overview of their research.  Links to all the materials (slides, papers, software, data) are gathered in the GitHub  repo , but repeated here are the links for the students and their presentations:   Brian Llinas :  RAG-TEC: Extracting and Classifying Topics in Digital News Collections Using LLMs Lawrence Obiuwevwi :  Cognitive Prosthetic: An AI-Enabled Multimodal System for Episodic Recall in Knowledge Work Akshay Kolgar Nayak :  Contextual Scaffolding and Self-Efficacy: Supporting Computer Skill Development among Blind Learners in India Rochana Obadage :  CC30k: A Citation Contexts Dataset for Reproducibility-Oriented Sentiment Analysis Himarsha Jayanetti :  Infrastructure for ...

2026-06-19: From Chalk Dust to Code: My Journey from a Small Town to a Ph.D. in the U.S.

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I was born in a small town to two schoolteachers who believed education was not just a profession but a purpose. Growing up in such an environment meant that learning was never forced; it was simply part of everyday life, and curiosity was always encouraged rather than questioned. Books were treated like companions in our home, and questions were welcomed more than answers. My father, a mathematics teacher and statistics topper, did not just teach numbers. He taught me how to see patterns in the world, how to question things, and how to stay curious. He had a way of turning ordinary moments into lessons, showing me that knowledge was not confined to classrooms but hidden in everything around us. Conversations at home often revolved around ideas, discipline, perseverance, and integrity, quietly shaping my mindset long before I understood their value. That atmosphere made me believe that effort mattered more than circumstance and that consistency could take a person farther than talent a...

2026-06-09: Teaching Database Concepts for Senior Undergraduate and Graduate Students at ODU

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In the Spring 2026 semester at Old Dominion University (ODU), I taught CS 450 (Undergrad) / CS 550 (Graduate): Database Concepts . The course was fully online, with synchronous live Zoom sessions held twice a week. The attendance was not mandatory but strongly encouraged. All lectures were recorded and made available for students to access whenever needed. Figure 1: Canvas course page for CS 450/550: Database Concepts Through this blog post, I want to share my experience of teaching a senior-level undergraduate/graduate course for the first time, the behind-the-scenes realities of course preparation through to the end of the course, and how student feedback actively shaped the course as it progressed.  Since the course had been taught previously by other instructors, materials were already available, which made things easier. Rather than building everything from scratch, I started by copying over the existing course structure and then carefully updating it to align with the current...