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What do we know about how novices learn webcraft and programming, and how can we apply that knowledge to teaching free-range learners?

Right now, people all over the world are learning how to write programs and create web sites, but for every one who is doing it in a classroom there are a dozen free-range learners. This group will explore how we, as mentors, can best help them. Topics will include:

What does research tell us about how people learn? Why are the demographics of programming so unbalanced? What best practices in instructional design are relevant to free-range learners? What skills do people need in order to bake their own web? How are grassroots groups trying to teach these things now? What's working and what isn't?

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  • Under Development
  • Runs Jan. 16, 2012 to April 20, 2012
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People


Greg Wilson (organizer) Ethan White (participant) Heather Payne (participant) Laura Lyn  Plant (participant) Darlene (participant) Leigh Ann (participant) R.T. Lechow (participant) Luis Pedro Coelho (participant) lornajane (participant) Julie Pichon (participant) Neil Chue Hong (participant) David Felipe Camargo Polo (participant) Francesca (participant) MrSteve (participant) David Klappholz (participant) titaniumbones (participant) John Burk (participant) Ms. King (participant) Laura B (participant) Matthew (participant) Terri (participant) Rogelio Moreno (participant) harv (participant) jazz (participant) Ginster (participant) Duane Griffin (participant) Leopoldo Teixeira (participant) Eric G (participant) Gregory Brown (participant) Kerri (participant) Jaelle (participant) kgardnr (participant) Michelle Levesque (participant) Andrew Cox (participant) Jessy Kate Schingler (follower) Jessica McKellar (follower) Tim Topper (follower) stark (follower) Tavish Armstrong (follower) rahmin (follower) jdobry (follower) Karen Rustad (follower) André Roberge (follower) Kim Wilkens (follower) AJC (follower) krishnakumar (follower) Gonzalo (follower) Mark Guzdial (follower) robkim (follower) Adam Bachman (follower) Maxn (follower) Anderson Juhasc (follower) Paul Wilson (follower) Brigitte Jellinek (follower) audrey (follower) Mark F. (follower) LadyLeader (follower) Sumana Harihareswara (follower) Brylie Oxley (follower) Josh Greenberg (follower) Ian Mitchell (follower) wyattwang (follower) TR (follower) Sunny Lee (follower)

Tasks


  • Getting started (target date: Jan 20)
  • Who Are Your Learners? (target date: Jan 27)
  • Big Ideas / Individualized Projects
  • Why It's Hard and Why It's Unbalanced

External Links


  • Reading List
  • Mark Guzdial: Computing Education
  • Audrey Watters: Hack Education
  • Software Carpentry
  • Programming for Biologists
  • Gregory Brown
  • Julie Pichon
  • Jaelle
  • Mr Steve
  • Laura B
  • Terri Ko
  • Leopoldo Teixeira
  • Neil Chue Hong
  • Andrew Cox
  • Heather Payne
  • Luis Pedro Coelho
  • rglmrn
    Greg Wilson
    Greg Wilson at How to Teach Webcraft and Programming to Free-Rang
    posted message: Catherynne Valente's article has me thinking about the motivating examples we choose when we teach programming: http://www.antipope.org/charlie/blog-static/2012/02/life-with-and-without-animated.html.
    08 Mar 2012 via courses.p2pu.org
    1 Comment

    Comments


  • MrSteve   March 14, 2012, 12:10 a.m.

    Okay being male, my first reaction was way cool (to the water repelling, self cleaning stuff).

    But to Greg's point, what activites/projects/examples would be more motivating to girls/women?

    One thing we are looking to add to Etoys (through a hopefully funded GSoC project) is lilypad. So you can create "computational textiles".  Besides being of more interest to girls, I think it will add a cool fashion factor, which may make programming and technology more culturally acceptable to female students.

    Nice article here on lilypad

    Here is a youtube example


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