Summary
Trevor Tomesh is an Assistant Professor of Computer, Information and Data Science with 13 years of teaching and academic experience, currently based in New Richmond, Wisconsin. He holds a PhD in Computer Science and teaches cyber ethics alongside introductory-to-intermediate Python and Java, blending technical instruction with ethical context. His research and teaching interests span cyber ethics, interactive hardware, constrained and analogous systems, simulation, games development, and complex systems, reflecting a multidisciplinary approach to computing. A committed Roman Catholic and self-described #ConservativeAcademic, he brings an explicitly principled perspective to classroom discussions on technology and society. Trevor has a long track record of sessional and lab instruction across North American universities, emphasizing hands-on interactive gadgets and human-computer interaction. Unafraid to merge conviction with code, he describes his work succinctly as “Fearfully Coded,” signaling a reflective, values-driven approach to software and pedagogy.
13 years of coding experience
5 years of employment as a software developer
Bachelor of Science (B.Sc.), Physics, Bachelor of Science (B.Sc.), Physics at University of Wisconsin - River Falls
Doctor of Philosophy (Ph.D.), Computer Science, Doctor of Philosophy (Ph.D.), Computer Science at University of Regina
N/A, Computing, N/A, Computing at University of Worcester
English, German