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Atharva Naik; Jessica Ruhan Yin; Anusha Kamath; Qianou Ma; Sherry Tongshuang Wu; R. Charles Murray; Christopher Bogart; Majd Sakr; Carolyn P. Rose – British Journal of Educational Technology, 2025
The relative effectiveness of reflection either through student generation of contrasting cases or through provided contrasting cases is not well-established for adult learners. This paper presents a classroom study to investigate this comparison in a college level Computer Science (CS) course where groups of students worked collaboratively to…
Descriptors: Cooperative Learning, Reflection, College Students, Computer Science Education
Robin Samuelsson – British Journal of Educational Technology, 2025
Programming is becoming a key subject in early education globally, with surging problems of how computer science can become a subject for children of all ages and backgrounds. Problems of implementing new technologies in the old curricula have long been noted, and lately, concern over computer science education goals is often too narrow and…
Descriptors: Computer Science Education, Play, Early Childhood Education, Technology Integration
Erkan Er; Gökhan Akçapinar; Alper Bayazit; Omid Noroozi; Seyyed Kazem Banihashem – British Journal of Educational Technology, 2025
Despite the growing research interest in the use of large language models for feedback provision, it still remains unknown how students perceive and use AI-generated feedback compared to instructor feedback in authentic settings. To address this gap, this study compared instructor and AI-generated feedback in a Java programming course through an…
Descriptors: Student Evaluation, Student Attitudes, Feedback (Response), Artificial Intelligence
Experiencing Enjoyment in Visual Programming Tasks Promotes Self-Efficacy and Reduces the Gender Gap
Robbert Smit; Rahel Schmid; Nicolas Robin – British Journal of Educational Technology, 2025
Secondary school students (N = 269) participated in a daylong visual programming course held in a stimulating environment for start-up enterprises. The tasks were application-oriented and partly creative. For example, a wearable device with light-emitting diodes, (ie, LEDs) could be applied to a T-shirt and used for optical messages. Our research…
Descriptors: Self Efficacy, Gender Differences, Prediction, Student Attitudes