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Peer mentoring female computing students—does it make a difference?
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Source ACM International Conference Proceeding Series; Vol. 3 archive
Proceedings of the 3rd Australasian conference on Computer science education table of contents
The University of Queensland, Australia
Pages: 41 - 47  
Year of Publication: 1998
ISBN:1-58113-018-X
Author
A. Craig  Information Systems, Victoria University of Technology, P.O. BOX 14428 MCMC, Melbourne Victoria
Sponsors
SIGCSE: ACM Special Interest Group on Computer Science Education
University of Queensland : University of Queensland
Publisher
ACM  New York, NY, USA
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REFERENCES

Note: OCR errors may be found in this Reference List extracted from the full text article. ACM has opted to expose the complete List rather than only correct and linked references.

 
1
CartxxTight, A.& Colville, P. I995, 'A Mentor Scheme in the Bachelor of Computing', Equity rout Access- Y~na'ows of Opportunities in the 90% Second National Conference on Equity and Access in Tertiary Education 1995, La Trobe University, Monash University, Swinburne University, Melbourne.
 
2
Clulow, Val 1995, "Peer Mentoring: Can it ser~,e to "integrate" the fast year student7.', Barrett, Mary, (Ed) The Inaugural Pac09c Rim First Year Experience Conference, Queensland University of Technology, electronically published.
 
3
Craig,A, 1996, Encouraging Female Students In Business Computing, MBus Thesis, Victoria University of Technology, Melbourne.
 
4
Data Matters 1995, Gender and Engineering - Higher Education Data, Nov, The National Centre for Women: Employment, Education and Training.
 
5
Gibson, R. & Hartnett, J. 1993, 'Escaping the Stereotype: Is it harder for girls?' Fisher, Julie, (Ed), Networking for the Nineties- The Second Women in Computing Conference 1993, Victoria University of Technology, Melbourne, pp. 21-32.
 
6
Gruman, Galen 1990, 'Getting women and minorities into computer science', 1EEE Software, pp. 87-92.
 
7
Houghton, John 1996, 1996 VCE Enrolments: An lnitial Report, report presented to Victoria University of Technology.
 
8
Johnson, Cynthia 1990, 'Mentoring programs', Upcraft, M. & Gardner, J., (eds.). The freshman year experience - helping students survive and succeed in college, Jossey-Bass Publishers, Oxford, pp. 118-127.
 
9
Martin, Mary & Turner, Adrian 1996, 'A Peer Mentoring Scheme for First Year Computing Students' presented at The Second Pacifia Rim Conference, July 3-5, Melb. University, Melbourne.
 
10
Maslen, Geoff 1996, 'Why women log off when it comes to computing degrees', Campus News, 6 (44), p. 32. (Lang-quoted here in)
 
11
Noel, L.; Levitz, R.; Saluri, D. and Associates 1987, Increasing Student Retention, Jossey-Bass Publishers, San Francisco.
 
12
Senjen, Rye & Guthrey, Jane 1996, The lnternetfor Women. Melbourne: Spinifex Press.
 
13
Tinto, Vince 1987, Leaving College - Rethinking the causes and cures of student attrition, University of Chicago, Chicago.
 
14
Upcraft, M.& Gardner, J. 1990, The Freshman Year Experience- Helping Students Survive And Succeed In College, Jossey-Bass Publishers, Oxford.



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