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Transforming learning of programming: A mentoring project

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conference contribution
posted on 2024-11-23, 05:28 authored by Daryl D'Souza, Margaret HamiltonMargaret Hamilton, James HarlandJames Harland, Peter Muir, Charles ThevathayanCharles Thevathayan, Cecily Walker
Programming is central to Computer Science and cognate disciplines, and poses early-learning challenges in problem-solving and coding. Since the recent past the School of Computer Science & Information Technology (RMIT University) has provided a student mentoring service to assist novice student programmers with their programming, indeed, to build up their confidence in programming. The service has received favourable feedback from students and, as an interesting aside, has had the added benefit of increasing mentors¿ confidence and improving mentors¿ communication skills. Mentors volunteer their services under a University leadership initiative, and are not paid to assist students. In light of such success, we secured a University action-research teaching and learning grant, to investigate aspects of the service delivered to date. While mentoring has been shown to be helpful for novice student programmers to learn and improve their programming, less recognised, but of equal importance, is the value to mentors through the skills and experience they gain. This paper reports early findings of a dual-purpose research investigation into the mentoring service. The research project seeks to discover ways to improve the mentoring service for novice student programmers, as well as to enhance a range of qualities in mentors.

History

Start page

1

End page

10

Total pages

10

Outlet

Proceedings Tenth Australasain Computing Education Conference (ACE 2008)

Editors

Simon and Margaret Hamilton

Name of conference

Tenth Australasian Computing Education Conference (ACE 2008)

Publisher

The Australian Computer Society

Place published

Australia

Start date

2008-01-22

End date

2008-01-25

Language

English

Copyright

Copyright © 2008, Australian Computer Society, Inc

Notes

“RMIT University has undertaken diligent search endeavours to contact the copyright holder of this material. In the event you are the copyright holder RMIT is seeking to hear from you in the use of this work. Please contact RMIT immediately to discuss permission release and consent. Contact: permissions@rmit.edu.au"

Former Identifier

2006009247

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2011-05-15

Open access

  • Yes

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