DocumentCode
3712456
Title
Perceptions of non-CS majors in intro programming: The rise of the conversational programmer
Author
Parmit K. Chilana;Celena Alcock;Shruti Dembla;Anson Ho;Ada Hurst;Brett Armstrong;Philip J. Guo
Author_Institution
University of Waterloo, ON, Canada
fYear
2015
Firstpage
251
Lastpage
259
Abstract
Despite the enthusiasm and initiatives for making programming accessible to students outside Computer Science (CS), unfortunately, there are still many unanswered questions about how we should be teaching programming to engineers, scientists, artists or other non-CS majors. We present an in-depth case study of first-year management engineering students enrolled in a required introductory programming course at a large North American university. Based on an inductive analysis of one-on-one interviews, surveys, and weekly observations, we provide insights into students´ motivations, career goals, perceptions of programming, and reactions to the Java and Processing languages. One of our key findings is that between the traditional classification of non-programmers vs. programmers, there exists a category of conversational programmers who do not necessarily want to be professional programmers or even end-user programmers, but want to learn programming so that they can speak in the “programmer´s language” and improve their perceived job marketability in the software industry.
Keywords
"Programming profession","Education"
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Visual Languages and Human-Centric Computing (VL/HCC), 2015 IEEE Symposium on
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/VLHCC.2015.7357224
Filename
7357224
Link To Document