Proceedings of the 46th ACM Technical Symposium on Computer Science Education 2015
DOI: 10.1145/2676723.2677230
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Language Migration in non-CS Introductory Programming through Mutual Language Translation Environment

Abstract: In the past decade, improvements have been made to the environments used for introductory programming education, including by the introduction of visual programming languages such as Squeak and Scratch. However, migration from these languages to text-based programming languages such as C and Java is still a problem. Hence, using the OpenBlocks framework proposed at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, we developed a system named BlockEditor, which can translate bidirectionally between Block (the block la… Show more

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Cited by 40 publications
(29 citation statements)
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“…Experimentally, we did see users deploy both modes, and seem to understand the connection between the two. Similar to DiSalvo [49], and like Weintrop [50] and Matsuzawa [20] as well, however, we found that a number of participants very strongly preferred the textual mode and were even scornful of the tiled mode and its presence, to the point of using text almost exclusively even when the system design made it more difficult to complete tasks in that way. Three participants explicitly noted unprompted that they were predisposed to dislike GUIs.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 83%
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“…Experimentally, we did see users deploy both modes, and seem to understand the connection between the two. Similar to DiSalvo [49], and like Weintrop [50] and Matsuzawa [20] as well, however, we found that a number of participants very strongly preferred the textual mode and were even scornful of the tiled mode and its presence, to the point of using text almost exclusively even when the system design made it more difficult to complete tasks in that way. Three participants explicitly noted unprompted that they were predisposed to dislike GUIs.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 83%
“…In our experiment, which used exactly parallel languages in both textual and visual modes, and in Matsuzawa et al's [20], which did not, understanding the relation between the two did not seem to be an especial problem, but intimidation by text was evident. Students in Matsuzawa et al's study with lower self-rating of their skill avoided the text view, but none of our self-rating questions showed a strong correlation with use of either mode; we did not have a generic "rate your programming skill" question, however.…”
Section: Discussioncontrasting
confidence: 49%
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