Title :
BJC in action: Comparison of student perceptions of a computer science principles course
Author :
Thomas W. Price;Jennifer Albert;Veronica Catete;Tiffany Barnes
Author_Institution :
Department of Computer Science, North Carolina State University, Raleigh, NC, 27606
Abstract :
The Beauty and Joy of Computing (BJC) is a curriculum for the new AP Computer Science Principles course. Over the past 2 years, we have collected post-course surveys from 399 students participating in the BJC course. This paper investigates how the responses of females and students from underrepresented racial minority groups (URMs) differed from those of their counterparts. We found that female students had taken fewer CS courses prior to BJC but that students from URMs had taken more prior CS courses. Both groups were nearly equally likely to recommend the course to a friend, with about 80% recommending. We found no evidence to suggest that female students showed more or less interest in specific CS topics, such as learning how computing has changed the world or making mobile apps/games. Despite having taken more CS courses prior to BJC, we found that students from URMs were overall less likely to intend to take additional CS courses. Overall, our findings are fairly consistent with the literature, and suggest that BJC makes some progress towards broadening participation in computing.
Keywords :
"Games","Mobile communication","Education","Computers","Programming","Sociology"
Conference_Titel :
Research in Equity and Sustained Participation in Engineering, Computing, and Technology (RESPECT), 2015
DOI :
10.1109/RESPECT.2015.7296506