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Exploring the Effects of a Collaborative Guided Inquiry Learning Approach on Performance and Retention of Underrepresented Minority Students across Multiple Sections in an Introductory Programming Course

Reference: Paul Salvador Inventado, Joshua Caleb Dy. (2024). Exploring the Effects of a Collaborative Guided Inquiry Learning Approach on Performance and Retention of Underrepresented Minority Students across Multiple Sections in an Introductory Programming Course. In SIGCSE 2024.

Entry Key: \cite{inventado-2024-urm}

Entry Type: @inproceedings

Abstract

This preliminary study investigates the impact of a collaborative guided inquiry learning (CGIL) approach on the retention and performance of underrepresented racial minority (URM) students in an Object-Oriented programming course at a Hispanic-serving institution. The study showed that this teaching method significantly improved academic performance for both URM and non-URM students, with no notable differences in retention rates. Student surveys highlight the method’s effectiveness in promoting communication and collaboration skills, which are the foundations of inclusion and diversity in the workplace. The results also show that it was fairly easy to replicate the positive learning experiences across multiple sections of a course. This approach can potentially increase retention, improve performance, and promote diversity within the Computer Science discipline, contributing to a more inclusive and skilled workforce in the technology industry.

Metadata

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Field Value
author Inventado, Paul Salvador and Dy, Joshua Caleb
title Exploring the Effects of a Collaborative Guided Inquiry Learning Approach on Performance and Retention of Underrepresented Minority Students across Multiple Sections in an Introductory Programming Course
year 2024
isbn 9798400704239
publisher Association for Computing Machinery
address New York, NY, USA
url https://doi.org/…
doi 10.1145/3626252.3630853
booktitle Proceedings of the 55th ACM Technical Symposium on Computer Science Education V. 1
pages 554–561
numpages 8
keywords academic performance, collaborative guided inquiry learning, hispanic-serving institution, object oriented programming, pogil, pogil-like, process oriented guided inquiry learning, retention, underrepresented racial minority
location Portland, OR, USA
series SIGCSE 2024