Strategies that students use to trace code: an analysis based in grounded theory


Autoria(s): Simon, B.; Thomas, Lynda; Fitzgerald, Sue
Contribuinte(s)

Department of Computer Science

Software Engineering

Data(s)

26/09/2008

26/09/2008

01/10/2005

Resumo

Fitzgerald, S., Simon, B., and Thomas, L. 2005. Strategies that students use to trace code: an analysis based in grounded theory. In Proceedings of the First international Workshop on Computing Education Research (Seattle, WA, USA, October 01 - 02, 2005). ICER '05. ACM, New York, NY, 69-80

How do beginning students approach problems which require them to read and understand code? We report on a Grounded Theory-based analysis of student transcripts from 12 institutions where students were asked to 'think aloud' when solving such problems. We identify 19 strategies used by students. Primary results are that all students employ a range of strategies, there were (in total) many different strategies that were applied, students use multiple strategies on each individual problem, students applied different strategies to different types of questions, and students often applied strategies poorly. We show that strategies conform with existing education theories including Bloom's Taxonomy and the Approaches to Study Inventory. Additionally, we discuss emergent theories developed through a card sort process.

Non peer reviewed

Formato

12

Identificador

Simon , B , Thomas , L & Fitzgerald , S 2005 , ' Strategies that students use to trace code: an analysis based in grounded theory ' pp. 69-80 .

PURE: 77749

PURE UUID: 7c4614c8-e9c4-4257-87b6-42fd9c39e658

dspace: 2160/657

http://hdl.handle.net/2160/657

Idioma(s)

eng

Tipo

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

Conference paper

Relação

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