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Magel, Kenneth I.; Hamblen, John W. – AEDS Journal, 1979
Describes a course that uses a network of microcomputers to teach students machine language and assembler programing. The course is intended to teach what the computer can do and what its limitations are, understandings that are often obscured when students work in high-level programing languages. (Author/IRT)
Descriptors: Computer Science Education, Course Descriptions, Higher Education, Microcomputers
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Magel, Kenneth – AEDS Journal, 1980
Courseware (computer based curriculum materials) development should follow the lessons learned by software engineers. The most important of 28 principles of software development presented here include a stress on human readability, the importance of early planning and analysis, the need for independent evaluation, and the need to be flexible.…
Descriptors: Computer Science Education, Computer Software, Design Requirements, Elementary Secondary Education
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Denenberg, Stewart A. – AEDS Journal, 1980
This paper describes the ACCOLADE (an alternative curriculum for computer literacy development) system in terms of its design goals, its components, an illustrative session with a learner, the computer-managed instruction subsystem, and a brief evaluation of a model pilot study. (Author/IRT)
Descriptors: Computer Assisted Instruction, Computer Managed Instruction, Computer Science Education, Higher Education
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Oman, Paul W. – AEDS Journal, 1986
Describes a study of 38 students at Eastern Oregon State College which identified mathematics proficiency as the key student characteristic leading to successful completion of computer science courses, and developed a model that accounts for 82 percent of the variation in students' final grades in computer courses for use by advisers. (LRW)
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Academic Advising, Analysis of Variance, Computer Science Education