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POGIL Activities in Data Structures: What do Students Value?

Reference: Tammy VanDeGrift. (2017). POGIL Activities in Data Structures: What do Students Value?. In SIGCSE ‘17.

Entry Key: \cite{vandegrift-2017-data-structures}

Entry Type: @inproceedings

Abstract

This paper describes the creation, use, and evaluation of POGIL (Process Oriented Guided Inquiry Learning) activities in a Data Structures course. POGIL draws upon constructivist and collaborative learning theories in which students work in teams through guided sets of questions. The purpose of this study was to see how students valued POGIL activities in terms of their learning. Survey responses were used to assess how students valued POGIL. Over 90\% of students stated that POGIL helped them learn the material. Not only did it help them learn data structures, they reported value in working through problems with others, seeing how others think, being accountable for their own learning, and using the activities to review the material. Overall, POGIL was valued by students and this teaching method could be of value to other computing courses.

Metadata

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Field Value
author VanDeGrift, Tammy
title POGIL Activities in Data Structures: What do Students Value?
year 2017
isbn 9781450346986
publisher Association for Computing Machinery
address New York, NY, USA
url https://doi.org/…
doi 10.1145/3017680.3017697
booktitle Proceedings of the 2017 ACM SIGCSE Technical Symposium on Computer Science Education
pages 597–602
numpages 6
keywords teams, inquiry-based learning, data structures, collaborative learning, POGIL
location Seattle, Washington, USA
series SIGCSE ‘17