31 research outputs found

    Abstraction in action: K-5 teachers' uses of levels of abstraction, particularly the design level, in teaching programming

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    Research indicates that understanding levels of abstraction (LOA) and being able to move between the levels is essential to programming success. For K-5 contexts LOA levels have been named: problem, design, code and running the code. In a qualitative exploratory study, five K-5 teachers were interviewed on their uses of LOA, particularly the design level, in teaching programming and other subjects. Using PCK elements to analyse responses, the teachers interviewed used design as an instructional strategy and for assessment. The teachers used design as an aide memoire and the expert teachers used design: as a contract for pair-programming; to work out what they needed to teach; for learners to annotate with code snippets (to transition across LOA); for learners to self-assess and to assess ‘do-ability’. The teachers used planning in teaching writing to scaffold learning and promote self-regulation revealing their insight in student understanding. One issue was of the teachers' knowledge of terms including algorithm and code; a concept of ‘emergent algorithms’ is proposed. Findings from the study suggest design helps learners learn to program in the same way that planning helps learners learn to write and that LOA, particularly the design level, may provide an accessible exemplar of abstraction in action. Further work is needed to verify whether the study's results are generalisable more widely

    A university-based model for supporting computer science curriculum reform

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    Computer science curriculum reform in the United Kingdom has been subject to substantial scrutiny—as it has in many other countries around the world—with England introducing a radical new computing curriculum from September 2014. However, in Wales—a devolved nation within the UK—political, geographical and socio-cultural issues have to date hindered any substantive educational policy or curriculum reform for computer science. In this paper, we present the activities of Technocamps, a national university-based schools outreach programme founded in 2003, and consider its wider impact on computer science education, schools, pupils and teachers in Wales. In contrast to successful interventions elsewhere in the UK in building and sustaining communities of practice, certain political and cultural challenges in Wales have largely prevented these successful models from being adopted. Through the consideration of the national case study presented in this paper, we demonstrate the necessity of the nation-wide school- and student-focused Technocamps model in building resilient and scalable practitioner-led support networks. Furthermore, with emerging curriculum reform in Wales, we frame the wider opportunity for computer science education and sustainably embedding cross-curricular digital competencies—along with changing the wider public perception and perceived value of computer science as an academic discipline—as a prospective replicable case study of a national engagement model for nations with similar aspirations of developing digitally confident and capable citizens. To this end, we conclude by drawing out the important lessons learnt for consideration when embarking on a programme of national curriculum reform and associated professional development

    Innovation and design in a changing world economy

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    Presented at the CBI's Competitiveness Forum, held 16 Jan 1996Available from British Library Document Supply Centre- DSC:q96/07903 / BLDSC - British Library Document Supply CentreSIGLEGBUnited Kingdo

    The contribution of design to the UK economy

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    SIGLEAvailable from British Library Document Supply Centre-DSC:GPE/1149 / BLDSC - British Library Document Supply CentreGBUnited Kingdo

    Macroeconomic policy and UK economic performance

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    SIGLEAvailable from British Library Document Supply Centre-DSC:3597.3859(2-97) / BLDSC - British Library Document Supply CentreGBUnited Kingdo

    The strength of the pound and UK manufacturing performance

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    SIGLEAvailable from British Library Document Supply Centre-DSC:q97/23735 / BLDSC - British Library Document Supply CentreGBUnited Kingdo
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