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Supporting Guided Inquiry with Cooperative Learning in Computer Organization

Reference: Yeajin Ham, Brandon Myers. (2019). Supporting Guided Inquiry with Cooperative Learning in Computer Organization. In SIGCSE ‘19.

Entry Key: \cite{ham-2019-comp-org}

Entry Type: @inproceedings

Abstract

The computer organization course must help students acquire difficult conceptual knowledge and design skills, and improve their teamwork skills for subsequent project courses. Prior research supports that cooperative learning, in which students work together to achieve common goals, may address these challenges. We studied whether increasing the amount of guided inquiry activities and the cooperative support for it (teams and reflection) in an intermediate computer science course would improve achievement and engagement. The intervention group had lower scores on one of two achievement measures, lower engagement, and lower task value of collaborative activities. Qualitative analysis showed that students valued hands-on learning yet resisted guided inquiry, suggesting that sharing the purpose of each type of activity is important. Furthermore, the results showed that students valued learning with peers but were frustrated by group dysfunction, suggesting that instructors must address teamwork comprehensively to realize the benefits of cooperative learning.

Metadata

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Field Value
author Ham, Yeajin and Myers, Brandon
title Supporting Guided Inquiry with Cooperative Learning in Computer Organization
year 2019
isbn 9781450358903
publisher Association for Computing Machinery
address New York, NY, USA
url https://doi.org/…
doi 10.1145/3287324.3287355
booktitle Proceedings of the 50th ACM Technical Symposium on Computer Science Education
pages 273–279
numpages 7
keywords collaborative learning, computer architecture, computer organization, cooperative learning, guided inquiry, pogil
location Minneapolis, MN, USA
series SIGCSE ‘19