Treffer: Novice Java Programming Mistakes: Large-Scale Data vs. Educator Beliefs

Title:
Novice Java Programming Mistakes: Large-Scale Data vs. Educator Beliefs
Language:
English
Source:
ACM Transactions on Computing Education. Jun 2017 17(2).
Availability:
Association for Computing Machinery. 2 Penn Plaza Suite 701, New York, NY 10121. Tel: 800-342-6626; Tel: 212-626-0500; Fax: 212-944-1318; e-mail: acmhelp@acm.org; Web site: http://toce.acm.org/
Peer Reviewed:
Y
Page Count:
21
Publication Date:
2017
Document Type:
Fachzeitschrift Journal Articles<br />Reports - Evaluative
DOI:
10.1145/2994154
ISSN:
1946-6226
Entry Date:
2020
Accession Number:
EJ1252367
Database:
ERIC

Weitere Informationen

Teaching is the process of conveying knowledge and skills to learners. It involves preventing misunderstandings or correcting misconceptions that learners have acquired. Thus, effective teaching relies on solid knowledge of the discipline, but also a good grasp of where learners are likely to trip up or misunderstand. In programming, there is much opportunity for misunderstanding, and the penalties are harsh: failing to produce the correct syntax for a program, for example, can completely prevent any progress in learning how to program. Because programming is inherently computer-based, we have an opportunity to automatically observe programming behaviour -- more closely even than an educator in the room at the time. By observing students' programming behaviour, and surveying educators, we can ask: do educators have an accurate understanding of the mistakes that students are likely to make? In this study, we combined two years of the Blackbox dataset (with more than 900 thousand users and almost 100 million compilation events) with a survey of 76 educators to investigate which mistakes students make while learning to program Java, and whether the educators could make an accurate estimate of which mistakes were most common. We find that educators' estimates do not agree with one another or the student data, and discuss the implications of these results.

As Provided