Saying isn't necessarily believing: influencing self-theories in computing


Autoria(s): Hanks, Brian; Fitzgerald, Sue; Murphy, Laurie; Thomas, Lynda; McCauley, Renee; Zander, Carol; Simon, Beth
Contribuinte(s)

Department of Computer Science

Software Engineering

Data(s)

25/09/2008

25/09/2008

2008

Resumo

Simon, B., Hanks, B., Murphy, L., Fitzgerald, S., McCauley, R., Thomas, L., and Zander, C. 2008. Saying isn't necessarily believing: influencing self-theories in computing. In Proceeding of the Fourth international Workshop on Computing Education Research (Sydney, Australia, September 06 - 07, 2008). ICER '08. ACM, New York, NY, 173-184.

Jane sees 50 compiler errors as a challenge. John sees them as defeat. Psychology research suggests these contrasting reactions may stem from students' self-theories, or their beliefs about themselves. Jane's reaction is characteristic of a growth mindset, the idea that with hard work and persistence, one's intelligence can increase. John's behavior is in line with a fixed mindset, the belief that individuals are born with a certain amount of intelligence and there is little they can do to change it. Numerous studies of self-theories have shown that students with a growth mindset perform better in academic settings; they cope more effectively with challenges, maintain higher grades, and are less susceptible to stereotype threat. In this study we attempted a 'saying is believing' intervention to encourage CS1 students to adopt a growth mindset both in general and towards programming. Despite notable success of this type of intervention in a non-CS context, our results offered few statistically significant differences both from pre-survey to post-survey and between control and intervention groups. Further, the statistically significant results we did find differed in direction between institutions (some students exhibited more growth response, others less). We analyzed further evidence to explore possible confounding issues including whether our intervention even registered with students and how students interpreted the questions which we used to assess their self-theories.

Non peer reviewed

Formato

12

Identificador

Hanks , B , Fitzgerald , S , Murphy , L , Thomas , L , McCauley , R , Zander , C & Simon , B 2008 , ' Saying isn't necessarily believing: influencing self-theories in computing ' pp. 173-184 .

PURE: 77553

PURE UUID: 7401f8ab-09f8-4758-be6e-48905661b4e5

dspace: 2160/650

http://hdl.handle.net/2160/650

http://portal.acm.org/citation.cfm?id=1404520.1404537&coll=ACM&dl=ACM&CFID=3302885&CFTOKEN=50605860%23

Idioma(s)

eng

Tipo

/dk/atira/pure/researchoutput/researchoutputtypes/contributiontoconference/paper

Conference paper

Relação

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