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Students' understandings of storing objects
Sorva, J.
This paper reports a phenomenographic study of how introductory
students view objects that have been created
and stored by an object-oriented program. By analyzing
student interviews, we identify five categories of description,
each representing a different kind of understanding
of the phenomenon. Of these categories, some represent
viable understandings that we would like our students
to have. Others are partially incorrect and indicate
that some students mistakenly focus their awareness on aspects
that are unhelpful or even harmful for constructing a
viable mental model of storing objects. This paper brings
together two previously disjointed branches of computer
science education research: the study of misconceptions
and the phenomenographic research approach. The phenomenographic
approach used in this study extends traditional
phenomenography by including partially incorrect
understandings in a phenomenographic outcome space,
and explicitly treating them as such. This approach offers
a new way of studying misconceptions and linking them
to correct understandings of a phenomenon. |
Cite as: Sorva, J. (2007). Students' understandings of storing objects. In Proc. Seventh Baltic Sea Conference on Computing Education Research (Koli Calling 2007), Koli National Park, Finland. CRPIT, 88. Lister, R. and Simon, Eds. ACS. 127-135. |
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