DocumentCode
2186937
Title
Gender: An Important Factor in End-User Programming Environments?
Author
Beckwith, Laura ; Burnett, Margaret
Author_Institution
Oregon State Univ., Corvallis, OR
fYear
2004
fDate
30-30 Sept. 2004
Firstpage
107
Lastpage
114
Abstract
A human-centric issue that has not been considered in the design of end-user programming environments is whether gender differences exist that are important to the design of these environments. Ignoring this issue would miss the opportunity of enhancing the effectiveness of end-user programmers by incorporating appropriate mechanisms to support gender-associated differences in decision making, learning, and problem solving. This paper takes a first step toward building a foundation for investigating this issue by surveying gender difference literature from five domains with an eye toward possible implications for end-user programming. We present a taxonomy of this literature, and derive a number of specific issues for each element of the taxonomy (stated as hypotheses). This foundation provides a starting point for organized investigations into issues that may be important for making breakthroughs in the effectiveness of end-user programmers
Keywords
decision making; gender issues; personal computing; programming environments; decision making; end-user programming environments; gender differences; human-centric issue; learning; problem solving; Buildings; Computer science; Computer science education; Decision making; Human computer interaction; Problem-solving; Programming environments; Programming profession; Software design; Taxonomy;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Visual Languages and Human Centric Computing, 2004 IEEE Symposium on
Conference_Location
Rome
Print_ISBN
0-7803-8696-5
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/VLHCC.2004.28
Filename
1372307
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