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Study Of Suitability Of Studio Model For Introductory Computing
Author(s) -
A.J. Brodersen,
Richard Shiavi
Publication year - 2020
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Conference proceedings
DOI - 10.18260/1-2--10724
Subject(s) - session (web analytics) , studio , computer science , engineering education , mathematics education , science and engineering , modalities , multimedia , psychology , engineering , engineering management , world wide web , engineering ethics , telecommunications , social science , sociology
The School of Engineering at Vanderbilt University requires all engineering students in their first semester to take a course that introduces computers in engineering. The question always arises about the best setting in which to teach this type of material; a combination of lecture and laboratory, or all laboratory. For two years the course was organized with two different modalities of instruction. One was the lecture/laboratory and the other the all laboratory structure. At the end of the semester an in-depth questionnaire with quantitative ratings was given to the students to determine if there were differences in learning preferences. Contingency tables were used to compare responses. There were several statistically significant differences in student responses favoring the all laboratory structure. Several of them are: the students are much more comfortable with computers at the end of the semester; either laboratory or working by oneself were the preferred settings for learning; and lecture was not a preferred setting for learning any topic.

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