Dr. Shahnaz Kamberi

Associate Professor | Department of Computer Science

College of Engineering and Computing (CEC)
George Mason University
4400 University Drive
Fairfax, VA 22030

Picture of Dr.Kamberi

Spring 2024

Courses Teaching:

CS109 Intro to Programming, Part B (002)

CS112 Introduction to Computer Programming (001)

Office Hours

Tuesdays and Thursdays 10:30 AM - 11:30 AM [Room: ENGR2706]
or by Appointment

Fall 2023

Courses Teaching:

CS109 Intro to Programming, Part B (002)

CS110 Essentials of Computer Science (001))



Office Hours

Mondays 1:30 - 2:30 [Room: ENGR2706]
or by Appointment

Spring 2023

Courses Teaching:

CS109 Intro to Programming, Part B (001)

CS112 Introduction to Computer Programming (002 & 003)



Office Hours

Mondays and Wednesdays 2:00 - 3:00 [Room: ENGR2706]
or by Appointment

Fall 2022

Courses Teaching:

CS108 Intro to Programming, Part A (001)

CS112 Introduction to Computer Programming (002 & 005)



Office Hours

Thursdays 1:30 - 3:30 [Room: ENGR2706]
or by Appointment

Spring 2022

Courses Teaching:

CS110 Essentials of Computer Science (002)

CS112 Introduction to Computer Programming (001 & 002)



Office Hours

Fridays 12:00PM - 1:00PM (Skype) [Skype: Shahnaz.Kamberi]
or by Appointment

Fall 2021

Courses Teaching:

CS100 Principles of Computing (DL2)

CS112 Introduction to Computer Programming (005 & 006)



Office Hours

Wednesdays 1:30PM - 3:30PM (ET) or by Appointment
[Skype: Shahnaz.Kamberi]

Summer 2021

Courses Teaching:

CS100 Principles of Computing (B01)



Office Hours

Tuesdays and Wednesdays 1-2PM(ET) or by Appointment
[Skype: Shahnaz.Kamberi]

Spring 2021

Courses Teaching:

CS211 Object Oriented Programming (001 and 003)



Office Hours

Mondays and Wednesdays 1 - 2 PM (ET) or by Appointment
[Skype: Shahnaz.Kamberi]

Fall 2020

Courses Teaching:

CS100 Principles of Computing

CS112 Introduction to Computer Programming



Office Hours

Tuesdays, Wednesdays, Thursdays 2:00 - 3:00 PM (ET)
[Skype: Shahnaz.Kamberi]

Biography

Shahnaz Kamberi is an educational games and ed-tech designer and developer and a serious games published researcher. She has taught computer science and computer game programming courses for over twelve years at multiple levels, both onsite and online.


Kamberi is a STEM research and outreach professional responsible for focusing on engaging the student in the classroom through new innovative teaching methods. She developed an educational video game to teach Java programming to adolescent girls, in hopes of increasing their interest in further studying computer science. She volunteers her time and makes every effort to increase the number of women and minorities in the computer science industry.


Her research field is in serious games and virtual worlds, more specifically in designing and developing games for education and training. She focuses on gender-inclusive and gender-neutral video game designs. Her teaching philosophy is “it is no longer teacher as presenter of content; it is a teacher as a designer of learning spaces and experiences.” She strives to remain flexible and apply real-world examples and hands-on approaches to learning; to keep her students engaged. As a professor and an avid STEM education researcher and promoter, she continues to experiment and learn about different teaching methods. While some methods work and some methods do not, it is her constant application of different approaches that challenges her students and help them not only understand the course material but also apply what they have learned.

Degrees

Doctor of Science, Computer Science, Colorado Technical University (2015)
Master of Science, Computer Animation, Bournemouth University (2006)
Bachelor of Science, Applied Mathematics, George Mason University (2005)