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ACM SIGCSE Journal Club

Better teaching and learning, one paper at a time...
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Computer ScienceAlan HayesAlastair IronsDigital BadgesFaron MollerInformatique et sciences de l'informationAnglais
Publié

Microcredentials are mini-qualifications that allow learners to provide evidence of their broader skills alongside their traditional academic awards. How can these awards be integrated into existing educational qualifications?

Computer ScienceProgramming LanguagesCs1CS101James DavenportInformatique et sciences de l'informationAnglais
Publié

What is the most dangerous course to teach in Computing? Join us on Monday 7th August at 2pm BST (UTC+1) to discuss an opinion piece by Tony Clear from Auckland University of Technology on this very subject. Tony argues that introductory programming (aka CS1) is the most dangerous course for educators to teach. Do you agree with him?

PedagogyAssessmentFeedbackJane WaiteJoanna TaiInformatique et sciences de l'informationAnglais
Publié

A good theory can be the most concentrated form of knowledge. By encapsulating an infinite number of cases, a theory can make predictions rather than just describing a finite number of disjointed facts. So how does theory feature in research about assessment and feedback? Join us on Monday 3rd July at 2pm BST (UTC+1) to discuss a paper investigating this question by Juuso Henrik Nieminen, Margaret Bearman &

Computer ScienceExperiential Learning,Problem-based LearningWidening ParticipationAsciidocInformatique et sciences de l'informationAnglais
Publié

The textbook has long been a mainstay of education. Although online textbooks can give students easy (and sometimes free) access to increasingly interactive resources, authors have a bewildering array of tools and publishing models to select from.

Artificial Intelligence,Programming LanguagesSoftware EngineeringAiAndrew Luxton-ReillyInformatique et sciences de l'informationAnglais
Publié

Programming is hard, or at least it used to be. AI code generators like Amazon’s CodeWhisperer, DeepMind’s AlphaCode, GitHub’s CoPilot, Replit’s Ghostwriter and many others now make programming easier, at least for some people, some of the time. What opportunities and challenges do these new tools present for educators?

Artificial Intelligence,EthicsProgramming LanguagesAcademic IntegrityAiInformatique et sciences de l'informationAnglais
Publié

Maybe you wrote that code and maybe you didn’t. If AI helped you, such as the OpenAI Codex in GitHub Copilot, how did it solve your problem? How much did Artificial Intelligence help or hinder your solution? Join us to discuss a paper by Michel Wermelinger from the Open University published in the SIGCSE technical symposium earlier this month on this very topic.

Artificial Intelligence,Programming LanguagesCEPCode ComprehensionMaria KalliaInformatique et sciences de l'informationAnglais
Publié

It’s all very well getting an AI to write your code for you but neither writing code or reading code are the same as understanding code. So what is going on in novices brains when they learn to actually understand the code they are reading and writing?

Collaborative LearningComputer ScienceProgramming LanguagesSoftware EngineeringAmazon Web ServicesInformatique et sciences de l'informationAnglais
Publié

More and more software development tools are available in the cloud, with tools like Replit, CodingRooms, GitHub Codespaces, Amazon Web Services Cloud9, JetBrains and Eclipse all offering online tools for developers to code collaboratively in the cloud. Integrated Development Environments (IDEs) which have traditionally been available as “fatter” clients are increasingly available as “thinner” web-based clients running in a browser.

Computer ScienceDiana KirbyElizabeth ColeEnglandGlasgowInformatique et sciences de l'informationAnglais
Publié

Computing is widely taught in schools in the UK and Ireland, but how does the subject vary across primary and secondary education in Scotland, England, Wales and Ireland? Join us to discuss via a paper published at UKICER.com by Sue Sentance, Diana Kirby, Keith Quille, Elizabeth Cole, Tom Crick and Nicola Looker.

Programming LanguagesSoftware EngineeringAlexandra-Lucia CostacheBlueJJavaInformatique et sciences de l'informationAnglais
Publié

Java is widely used as a teaching language in Universities around the world, but what wider problems does it present for novice programmers? Join us to discuss via a paper published in TOCE by Neil Brown, Pierre Weill-Tessier, Maksymilian Sekula, Alexandra-Lucia Costache and Michael Kölling.

Paper SuggestionsAlan HayesEmployabilityEmployerEmploymentInformatique et sciences de l'informationAnglais
Publié

What do employers want from Computer Science students and how good are Universities in producing graduates with what employers need? Join us to discuss via a paper by Roseanne English and Alan Hayes from UKICER 2022.