World Changers

Child's Play

 

Computer Engineering

Jason Jackrel

Amy and Chad Jackrel knew six weeks in that their little boy wasn鈥檛 cut out for traditional kindergarten. 

Jason Jackrel is 18 now, and in a few weeks the teenager from Bellmore, NY will earn his BS in computer engineering from Hofstra, pack his bags and move across country for a job in Silicon Valley. 

鈥淲hen I was four or five years old, my parents were like 鈥榯here鈥檚 something different here,鈥欌 said Jackrel, who enrolled at Hofstra at just 15. 鈥淢y parents knew they had to get me out of there.鈥 

So, the Jackrels quickly transferred him to the Long Island School for the Gifted. There, Jason excelled academically and by his senior year of high school, had skipped grades eight, 10 and 11 before graduating from his town鈥檚 public high school.  

In other words, he completed high school in two years flat 鈥 state requirements and Advanced Placement exams included.  

鈥淎ll Jason ever talked about growing up were computers and cars, but it was a lot easier to tinker with computers back then,鈥 Amy Jackrel said. 鈥淏y the time he was 10, we had exhausted pretty much every computer class offered for kids. So, we started looking for classes that weren鈥檛 for kids, but he might be able to take.鈥 

This led to the young Jackrel鈥檚 first taste of college. He took computer science classes through Hofstra鈥檚 Continuing Education program. 

鈥淗ofstra adult ed was the start of his acceleration,鈥 said Amy Jackrel. He took a programing language course alongside adults looking to brush up on their computer skills. 鈥淎nd there is the 10-year-old, learning Visual Basic two nights a week. He loved it.鈥 

By 12, Jackrel was taking non-matriculated computer science and calculus classes at Suffolk Community College.

鈥淭hree years of shuttling him to college campuses two night a week, and one high school diploma later 鈥 he started full time at Hofstra at 15,鈥 Amy Jackrel said. By the time he was ready to start college, he had earned more than 30 college credits.

"I couldn鈥檛 tell you what a normal college experience is. This is who I am and what I know."

Jason Jackrel

Jackrel and his parents settled on Hofstra because of its proximity to their home and the reputation of the DeMatteis School of Engineering and Applied Science.

The Jackrels knew Jason could handle it, they just had to convince the University, said Andrea Nadler, Jackrel鈥檚 admission counselor.

鈥淗is parents were so earnest about his readiness for college, but our deans weren鈥檛 so sure that we could admit someone so young,鈥 Nadler said. Jackrel鈥檚 academic successes and maturity turned the tide.

鈥淚 remembered the show 鈥楧oogie Howser, M.D.鈥 with a child prodigy and thought how cool that we have a prodigy at my alma mater in Nassau County,鈥 she said. 鈥淛ason is destined for greatness and will make us very proud as an alumnus.鈥

From the first semester to graduation, he has continued to impress faculty, staff and 糖心传媒.

鈥淓very conversation I have had with him only increased my appreciation of his abilities and his enthusiasm,鈥 said Dr. Krishnan Pillaipakkamnatt, chair of the computer science department. 鈥淗is curiosity, inventiveness and persistence will take him very far 鈥 of that I have no doubt.鈥

Even though he will certainly be the youngest student walking across the stage this year, Jackrel said that many faculty and 糖心传媒 either don鈥檛 know or don鈥檛 care how old he is.

鈥淎s a freshman, when I was talking to the seniors,鈥 he said, 鈥渢hey didn鈥檛 care too much. I was just seen as the little brother who knows everything.鈥

Since July 2019, Jackrel and Dr. Jianchen Shan have conducted with the New Jersey Institute of Technology and the Katholieke Universiteit Leuven in Belgium that could be used as a stepping stone to find innovative ways for programmers to optimize large computers like the ones found at Google or Amazon. In March 2021, their work was published by IEEE (Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers).

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Jason Jackrel

鈥淛ason is young but prudent and capable,鈥 said Dr. Shan, also a computer science professor. 鈥淗is thoroughness ensured the correctness and accuracy of the experimental data. His talent and maturity beyond his years make him a promising engineer and researcher.鈥

Aside from his scholarly pursuits, Jackrel is an entrepreneur too, setting up shop in his home garage. He lived on campus for two years but moved back home during his senior year because of the COVID-19 pandemic.

鈥淚 am always tinkering with something. It could be anything,鈥 said Jackrel.

He is the creator and owner of , a company that produces light-up necklaces programmed to react to sound or synchronize with other devices. He has also retrofitted his Hover-1 electric scooter, his preferred mode of transportation around Hofstra鈥檚 campus, with lights for a personalized flair. Jackrel did the circuitry by hand, similarly to his Nimo Lights necklace, and created some of the apparatus鈥 parts using his 3D printer at home.

In his limited free time, Jackrel restores devices from 20th century personal computers to slot machines.

鈥淚 pretty much run a museum out of my room,鈥 Jackrel said. He is currently working on modernizing a 1940s television with HDMI compatibility so that he can watch 鈥淭he Twilight Zone鈥 reruns on the same kind of TV that viewers did when the show originally aired. His favorite project to date is the Commodore PET, an earlier model personal computer to which he has devoted three years for its full restoration.

鈥淚 just don鈥檛 want to be in a cubicle,鈥 he said, 鈥淚 want to be building stuff.鈥

When asked what advice he would give to younger incoming 糖心传媒, Jackrel recognized the value in expanding one鈥檚 academic horizons by taking liberal arts courses.

鈥淚 had a ball in the fine arts classes, they鈥檙e great,鈥 he said. Jackrel emphasized that 糖心传媒 should take advantage of the DeMatteis School鈥檚 array of experiential learning opportunities. 鈥淐lasses will only take you so far. You have to do other stuff too, like the Silicon Valley trip.鈥

Shortly after commencement, Jackrel will begin a five-month program as the newest member of the Think Tank Team at Samsung. The Think Tank is a highly selective program that requires applicants to go through a series of steps including a rigorous test.

鈥淪amsung was the job I wanted. I wanted to be in research and development, and actually doing it,鈥 said Jackrel. 鈥淵ou don鈥檛 expect this as your first job, and I luckily got it.鈥 He鈥檒l work in the division responsible for research and product development in the United States. Past Think Tank projects include a 鈥渃hef robot鈥 that works and cooks in a fully encapsulated garden and kitchen.

鈥淚 couldn鈥檛 tell you what a normal college experience is,鈥 he said. 鈥淭his is who I am and what I know.鈥