DocumentCode
609880
Title
Changing Computer Programming Education: The Dinosaur That Survived in School: An Explorative Study about Educational Issues Based on Teachers´ Beliefs and Curriculum Development in Secondary School
Author
Rolandsson, L.
Author_Institution
R. Inst. of Technol., KTH, Stockholm, Sweden
fYear
2013
fDate
21-24 March 2013
Firstpage
220
Lastpage
223
Abstract
According to teachers, the computer programming education dependence on students´ logical and analytical abilities (even before the course starts). A majority of teachers also perceive their pedagogy as non-sufficient for students´ learning. The paper unravels two types of instruction at upper secondary school, one which emphasizes individual work with programming languages assisted by a teacher, and one which emphasizes students´ experiences of learning concepts. Two types of instruction that corresponds to the existence of two groups of teachers during the 1980s, the defenders who perceived learning as based on repeating sequences in a behavioristic manner, and partisans who perceived learning as based on discovery and self-teaching. The paper suggests that instructional design has remained the same, since the beginning of the 1970s, which could be the rationales for the difficulties in learning and teaching computer programming.
Keywords
computer science education; educational institutions; programming; teaching; computer programming education; curriculum development; educational issue; learning concept; learning preception; programming language; secondary school; student analytical ability; student learning; student logical ability; teacher belief; teaching; Computers; Educational institutions; Programming profession; Seminars; beliefs; curriculum; education; teachers; upper secondary school;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Learning and Teaching in Computing and Engineering (LaTiCE), 2013
Conference_Location
Macau
Print_ISBN
978-1-4673-5627-5
Electronic_ISBN
978-0-7695-4960-6
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/LaTiCE.2013.47
Filename
6542265
Link To Document