posted on 2025-05-10, 23:19authored bySimon, Sally Fincher, Raymond Lister, Marian Petre, Ken Sutton, Denise Tolhurst, Jodi Tutty, Anthony Robins, Bob Baker, Illona Box, Quintin Cutts, Michael de Raadt, Patricia Haden, John Hamer, Margaret Hamilton
This paper describes a multi-national, multi-institutional study that investigated introductory programming courses .. Student participants were drawn from eleven institutions, mainly in Australasia, during the academic year of 2004. A number of diagnostic tasks were used to explore cognitive, behavioural, and attitudinal factors such as spatial visualisation and reasoning, the ability to articulate strategies for commonplace search and design tasks, and attitudes to studying. The results indicate that a deep approach to learning was positively correlated with mark for the course, while a surface approach was negatively correlated; spatial visualisation skills are correlated with success; a progression of map drawing styles identified in the literature has a significant correlation with marks; and increasing measures of richness of articulation of a search strategy are also associated with higher marks. Finally, a qualitative analysis of short interviews identified the qualities that students themselves regarded as important to success in programming.
History
Journal title
Australian Computer Science Communications
Volume
28
Issue
5
Pagination
189-196
Publisher
Australian Computer Society, Inc
Language
en, English
College/Research Centre
Faculty of Science and Information Technology
School
School of Design, Communication and Information Technology