Amy Ko posted a slide deck about CS education in higher education from a presentation she made to a group at Microsoft. There is a ton of stuff in there. I need to read it a couple more times actually. I’ll probably blog some more based on other things she brings up. Issues of equity for example. That one I need to think over a bit more as I process the reality of the world today. But for this post I want to focus on some of the ideas she shared for teaching beginners.
Under the heading “Classes move too fast” she writes “Many introductory programming courses now include a 1) professional-grade programming language, 2) a professional-grade IDE, 3) a professional-grade version control system, and 4) a professional-grade test framework.”
This is too much for many students. In my end of year survey most of my students felt that Visual Studio (a professional-grade IDE using a professional-grade programming language) was fine for them. Not to hard. And a lot of teachers are using GitHub – a professional grade version control system. That is still a lot to learn just to get going though. My students may think they are doing just fine but honestly I spend a lot of time fixing projects because it is far to easy to mess them up. I’m finally beginning to face that truth.
Later in the presentation Dr. Ko talks about making tools that make collaboration and working together easier. How do students work together? How do they do it when they are separated by time and space? That is something we have to think about even more these days.
What is the answer? Well, I’d like to see an IDE and language that creates projects that are harder to screw up for one thing. Don’t ever let beginners use Save As in a Visual Studio project. Doing so is almost a guarantee that a beginner will mess up their project in serious ways. Save As as an option for experts? Yep. We don’t want that for beginners. That’s just the start. Students are always closing windows they think they don’t need but later realize that they need them after all.
And collaboration? GitHub works for some. As I said I know a number of teachers use it with their students. I have had students who used it on their own as well. Awfully smart girls those two. But its got some rough edges. It’s really a powerful professional tool that offers more than most students or teachers really need. And there are so many options and steps! We need something more simple! It needs to be tied in to the IDE fairly transparently as well.
Pair programming remotely? I’ve tried Visual Studio Live Share a bit.and it has some real potential. Not many seem to know about it yet. It does require that people have a reliable want to share links for sessions. I’m not sure how it would work if a teacher wanted to look at a lot of student sessions are once. And we are still dealing with Visual Studio or VS Code and their projects.
This last semester I used Microsoft Server Manager to work with students online/remotely. Worked great as long as we were on the same virtual machine. It’s not something I want to give students access to though. I would like that functionality in a different tool. Especially if making the connection was as easy as this one was. It was easier than Live Share. So the tool I would want would probably involve some sort of “server” that was attached to a class that let students find their partners and connect with permission from the other student. Wouldn’t that be cool?
So what I want is an IDE that doesn’t let students mess up their projects easily, does easy version control with minimal set up or steps to make happen, and easy sharing of coding sessions. All built in with an easy set up.
A test framework? That’s a topic for another post.
2 comments:
"This is too much for many students." How about too much for many (most?) CS/programming teachers? This year we are going to have a brand new business teacher. Young, first teaching job. In Montana a Business Ed degree qualifies you to teach programming with absolutely no course work or experience. On paper he is a qualified CS teacher. We need him to teach Programming I. I am building a Scratch and Small Basic course for him as a starter. Most of the CS/programming teachers I know started this way, me included. To get to the level to use a pro language, pro IDE like VS or Eclipse, a version control system and a pro test framework involves years of trial and error and a lot of hair pulling. In fact the only CS teachers I know that can do all this stuff came from industry, not from Education. In reality I do not think many high school CS teachers go to those pro levels. Most of us hang in there with Python, Scratch, Small Basic and the dozen or so other languages that lend themselves to teaching introductory programming without having a CS degree or years of professional experience. I wish I had one of those two. I wish most CS teachers did.
How about Repl.it?
Easy to login, built in GitHub and built in collaboration.
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