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Engaging students and teaching modern concepts: literate, situated, object-oriented programming
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Source Technical Symposium on Computer Science Education archive
Proceedings of the twenty-fifth SIGCSE symposium on Computer science education table of contents
Phoenix, Arizona, United States
Pages: 329 - 333  
Year of Publication: 1994
ISBN:0-89791-646-8
Also published in ...
Authors
Glenn Meter  School of Computer Science, Carnegie Mellon University
Philip Miller  School of Computer Science, Carnegie Mellon University
Sponsor
SIGCSE: ACM Special Interest Group on Computer Science Education
Publisher
ACM  New York, NY, USA
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ABSTRACT

This paper describes our experience in using situated programming to deliver modern computer science concepts in the introductory programming course at Carnegie Mellon University. We used an artificial life simulation and taught object-oriented programming as well as more traditional material. The course was an experience, not an experiment, since many aspects of the course simultaneously changed from prior offerings. Nevertheless, what we saw was fundamental and potentially far-reaching. The most important result was that students were intellectually engaged. They came to grips with basic object-oriented programming, they mastered the topics of procedural programming, they learned first hand about computer simulation, they learned perhaps a bit about biology. Most importantly, through it all they used programming to express and explore their own powerful and novel ideas.


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
"Situated Programming" was coined by Paul Horwitz of Bolt Beranek and Newman Inc. at the NSF's Application's of Advarw.exl Technologies Project Director's Meeting, June 23-25, 1993.
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Ibid.
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Cohen, B., The Inverted Curriculum, National Economics Development Council, London 1991.
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Meyer, Bertrand, Toward an Object-Oriented Curriculum, Journal of Object-Oriented Programming, v6 p76(6) May 1993,
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14
Decker, Rick and Hirshiield, Smart, Top-Down Teaching with OOE Proceedings of the Twenty.Fourth SIGCSE Techra'cal Symposium on Computer Science Education, March 1993.
 
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Wu, C. Thomas, Teaching OOP to Beginners, Journal of Object-Orlented Programming. v6 p47(4) March-April 1993.
 
16
Meyer, Bertrand, Ibid.
 
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Brusilovslcy, Peter, Calabrese, E., Hvorecky, J., Kouchnierenko, A., Miller, P., Mini-languages: a way for learning the principles of programming. Workshop at CAL 93, University of York, Alxil 1993.
 
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However, unlike Karel, SmallTalk is used for industrial programming in many parts of the country.
 
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In addition to our ~intments in Computer Science at CMU we are a part of the Center for Light Microscope Imaging and Biotechnology, a National Science Foundation Science and Technology Center,
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MacApp, ~ Apple Computer Co. 1984 - 1993.
 
23
Pattis, Richard E., Ibid.
 
24
Pane, J. and Miller, P. The ACSE Multimedia Science Learning Environment, International Conference on Computers in Education, Taipei, Taiwan, 1993.
 
25
Fazarinc, Zvonko, Overhead in Writing Physics Courseware, Proceedings of the Asia.Pacific Conference on Com. purer Education, October 26-28, 1988, Shanghai China.


Collaborative Colleagues:
Glenn Meter: colleagues
Philip Miller: colleagues