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Challenges to Computer Science Education Research Mark Guzdial College of Computing/GVU Georgia Tech Bottomline: What we’re doing isn’t new, so a contribution.

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Presentation on theme: "Challenges to Computer Science Education Research Mark Guzdial College of Computing/GVU Georgia Tech Bottomline: What we’re doing isn’t new, so a contribution."— Presentation transcript:

1 Challenges to Computer Science Education Research Mark Guzdial College of Computing/GVU Georgia Tech Bottomline: What we’re doing isn’t new, so a contribution means knowing what’s happened…and going beyond it.

2 Computer Science is new, But Humans aren’t Evolution is slow. Lessons from Education are relevant for us.  Humans are bad at estimating their own performance and learning. Therefore, course opinion surveys are inaccurate measures of educational innovations.  Humans learn throughout their lives—our brains have enormous plasticity. Therefore, we don’t have to teach everything in the first semester, and people can unlearn “bad habits”

3 And Computer Science isn’t that new, People have been studying object-oriented programming since the mid-70’s.  Alan Kay and Adele Goldberg described students getting lost in class hierarchies in 1978.  We’ve known that students confuse class and instance for over 20 years. If we teach computer applications first, students won’t learn the theory to make it all make sense.  Said Alan Perlis in 1961.

4 And Computer Science Education isn’t new either For example: Lessons about Algorithm Animation  Aptitude-Treatment Interaction (ATI)  Static images.  Predictions.  Making own’s own. A contribution means we have to build on what others have done.  Reinvention is rarely contribution.


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