Treffer: Teaching Introductory Programming to IS Students: Java Problems and Pitfalls

Title:
Teaching Introductory Programming to IS Students: Java Problems and Pitfalls
Language:
English
Source:
Journal of Information Technology Education. 2006 5:491-515.
Availability:
Informing Science Institute. 131 Brookhill Court, Santa Rosa, CA 95409. Tel: 707-537-2211; Fax: 480-247-5724; Web site: http://JITE.org
Peer Reviewed:
Y
Physical Description:
PDF
Page Count:
25
Publication Date:
2006
Document Type:
Fachzeitschrift Journal Articles<br />Reports - Descriptive
Education Level:
Higher Education
ISSN:
1547-9714
Number of References:
31
Entry Date:
2008
Accession Number:
EJ808971
Database:
ERIC

Weitere Informationen

This paper examines the impact the use of the Java programming language has had on the way our students learn to program and the success they achieve. The importance of a properly constructed first course in programming cannot be overstated. A course well experienced will leave students with good programming habits, the ability to learn on their own, and a favorable impression of programming as a profession. In this paper I detail how and why the Java programming language was selected for our curriculum, how my teaching has evolved over the years since Java has been adopted, and what successes and failures I've encountered. Specifically, this paper discusses some of the peculiarities of the Java programming language that make it difficult to learn and some suggestions to overcome them, as well as some of the teaching paradigms and programming tools I have employed. What my experience has shown is that combining the use of a modern interactive development environment such as the Netbeans, with active learning and a breadth-first approach is found to increase student satisfaction, increase success rates, and lower dropout frequencies. (Contains 4 tables and 4 figures.)

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