Skip to content

Teaching CS 1 with POGIL activities and roles

Reference: Helen H. Hu, Tricia D. Shepherd. (2014). Teaching CS 1 with POGIL activities and roles. In SIGCSE ‘14.

Entry Key: \cite{hu-2014-teaching}

Entry Type: @inproceedings

Abstract

The computer science community has started to experiment with process oriented guided inquiry learning, or POGIL, a learning approach that focuses on concept and process skills development by having students work together in organized teams. By emphasizing the learning process and group discussions, instructors who implement POGIL activities and roles in their classrooms may better address the different needs of their CS 1 students.After explaining how POGIL activities differ from other group activities, this paper elaborates on the importance of incorporating the learning cycle when developing a POGIL activity, so as to encourage rich group discussions and teamwork. It then describes the role of the instructor in a POGIL activity, and how POGIL roles need to be adapted for programming activities. It presents the results of using six POGIL activities in three CS 1 sections at a comprehensive liberal arts college, where the pass rate for female students increased compared to historical female pass rates for that class. Students who were introduced to recursion through a POGIL activity appear to have learned the material as well and retained the material better than students who learned recursion through a more traditional group activity.

Metadata

Download .bib file

Field Value
author Hu, Helen H. and Shepherd, Tricia D.
title Teaching CS 1 with POGIL activities and roles
year 2014
isbn 9781450326056
publisher Association for Computing Machinery
address New York, NY, USA
url https://doi.org/…
doi 10.1145/2538862.2538954
booktitle Proceedings of the 45th ACM Technical Symposium on Computer Science Education
pages 127–132
numpages 6
keywords POGIL, active learning, inquiry based learning, process skills, student-centered learning
location Atlanta, Georgia, USA
series SIGCSE ‘14