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The ability to articulate strategy as a predictor of programming skill

Simon, Cutts, Q., Fincher, S., Haden, P., Robbins, A., Sutton, K., Baker, B., Box, I., de Raadt, M., Hamer, J., Hamilton, M., Lister, R., Petre, M., Tolhurst, D. and Tutty, J.

    A multi-national, multi-institutional study investigating introductory programming courses drew on student participants 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. This paper reports in detail on the task that required participants to articulate a commonplace search strategy. The results indicate that increasing measures of richness of articulation of a search strategy are associated with higher marks in the course. Keywords: programming aptitude, articulation.
Cite as: Simon, Cutts, Q., Fincher, S., Haden, P., Robbins, A., Sutton, K., Baker, B., Box, I., de Raadt, M., Hamer, J., Hamilton, M., Lister, R., Petre, M., Tolhurst, D. and Tutty, J. (2006). The ability to articulate strategy as a predictor of programming skill. In Proc. Eighth Australasian Computing Education Conference (ACE2006), Hobart, Australia. CRPIT, 52. Tolhurst, D. and Mann, S., Eds. ACS. 181-188.
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