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SIGCSE '21: Proceedings of the 52nd ACM Technical Symposium on Computer Science Education
ACM2021 Proceeding
Publisher:
  • Association for Computing Machinery
  • New York
  • NY
  • United States
Conference:
SIGCSE '21: The 52nd ACM Technical Symposium on Computer Science Education Virtual Event USA March 13 - 20, 2021
ISBN:
978-1-4503-8062-1
Published:
05 March 2021
Sponsors:
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Abstract

Welcome to the 52nd SIGCSE Technical Symposium on Computer Science Education (the 2021 Technical Symposium), the premiere conference for computing educators. The 2021 Technical Symposium is sponsored by the Association for Computing Machinery (ACM) Special Interest Group on Computer Science Education (SIGCSE).

Last year's symposium was abruptly cancelled, even as attendees were checking into their hotels and the first night of workshops had completed. It quickly became clear that the current world situation would not abate and the SIGCSE Board asked the 2021 symposium conference and program committee to envision a symposium that was completely online. We asked even more of our conference co-chairs Mark Sherriff and Larry Merkle and program co-chairs Pamela Cutter, Alvaro Monge, and Judy Sheard than we ever have in the past. There are always countless hours that go into planning an event like the symposium. Usually, though, you have the ability to count on past experiences, stories, and former chairs to help you through tough spots or interesting situations. This year, there was no playbook to fall back upon. This had never been done before for the Technical Symposium. As a board, we are truly grateful for what has been accomplished by this talented group and are looking forward to this new experience.

The SIGCSE Technical Symposium provides us with a chance to honor two people for their contributions to computer science education and the SIGCSE community. The annual SIGCSE award for Outstanding Contribution to Computer Science Education will be given to Stephen Edwards (Virginia Tech). Stephen is probably best known within the community for Web-CAT: the Web-based Center for Automated Testing that he introduced in 2004. The automated grading software that is still in active use has processed over 3 million assignments submissions on the dedicated Web-CAT server, which doesn't take into account the approximately 60 institutions that use it on their own dedicated servers. Stephen's contribution to computer science education is prolific with over 100 publications, one of which was named to the SIGCSE Top 10 Symposium Papers of All Time in 2019. He is an ACM Distinguished Educator and has contributed to the community through service to the symposium as well as the supervision of numerous graduate students.

The annual SIGCSE award for Lifetime Service to the Computer Science Education Community will be given to Cary Laxer (Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology). There are likely very few people who have attended a SIGCSE Technical Symposium in the last 30 years who have not met Cary Laxer. Cary has been behind the registration desk for the Technical Symposium since 1996 and was program co-chair and conference co-chair in 1993 and 1995 respectively. During his time behind the registration desk, he has truly been the face of the Technical Symposium for many attendees. He was the first person to greet you, whether new to the event or having attended multiple times. Over the years he has watched the Technical Symposium and the job of the registration team grow and has overseen the transition of many of the functions that used to be done by hand to more automated and modern systems. He has also served numerous times as registrar and treasurer to the ITiCSE conference and has served for many years as a program evaluator for the Computing Accreditation Commission (CAC) of ABET where he is currently serving as chair of the CAC. This will be Cary's last year with the registration team of the Technical Symposium and we wish him well in this next stage of his career.

Please join me and the rest of the SIGCSE Board in congratulating both of them on their welldeserved awards.

In addition, the SIGCSE Test of Time award will be presented at the symposium for the first time. This is the second year for this award, but the first time it will be presented at the symposium. The winning paper is The Incredible Shrinking Pipeline (1997) authored by Tracy Camp. This paper is being recognized for its long-lasting contribution to computing education. In particular, this paper focuses on women's participation in computing and its decline from 1980 to 1994. The paper demonstrates the ways in which participation of women has declined and ultimately leaves the readers with the question of what the community can do to improve the situation. The paper has been cited over 650 times and has had a profound influence on many notable works discussing gender disparities in undergraduate computing since its initial publication. Although the problem documented in the paper has not been solved, it is no longer the case that the problem is brushed aside. Numerous efforts developed and continue to evolve new ways to address and stop the shrinking pipeline.

The 52nd SIGCSE Technical Symposium will be an amazing event. I hope that you enjoy the sessions, learn something new about computing education, meet new colleagues and friends, and catch up with ones you may have missed last year.

SESSION: Poster Session 5
abstract
Supporting CS Teachers through Local Communities: Perceptions of CSTA Chapter Leaders

This paper reports a study of CSTA chapter leaders' percep-tions of their chapter's roles in supporting computer science (CS) teachers. Intent on understanding the impact of member-ship in a professional organization on the development of teacher ...

abstract
Public Access
Document Analysis of ECEP Longitudinal Data: A Case Study with Indiana

In recent years, state members of the Expanding Computing Education Pathways (ECEP) Alliance have made efforts to increase access to and broaden participation in computing at the K-12 levels. Each ECEP state's K-12 computer science (CS) education ...

abstract
Exploring Computational Thinking Across Disciplines Through Student-Generated Artifact Analysis

To meet the demands of 21st century societies, it is essential that faculty across disciplines engage students with course activities and assignments that foster the development of computational thinking (CT). In this study, we address two pertinent ...

abstract
Deciphering Inclusivity for the Design of K-12 Computing Pathways

Three districts representing unique contexts and challenges from across the United States have been iteratively designing and implementing inclusive computing pathways for K-12 students. In this paper, we identify barriers to inclusivity within each ...

abstract
Preparing Teachers for Computational Thinking Integration in K-12: A Meta-Aggregation

In this poster, we will present the initial results of a meta-aggregation study that synthesizes qualitative evidence to identify the charac- teristics of effective in-service teacher professional development programs (TPD) around computational thinking ...

abstract
Build Bridges between Play, Computation, Visual Programming, and Text-based Programming in Early Childhood Education

In this poster, we focus on a learning path that can smoothly connect the unplugged activities with the plugged programming ones. Our approach is to provide young children with visual programming and text-based programming materials that are directly ...

abstract
Public Access
Navigating a Pandemic: Evaluating Communication with Parents in a STEM Program for Black and Latina Girls

This study focuses on the effectiveness of parent communication and engagement in an out-of-school (OST) STEM program for Black and Latina middle school girls. Through analysis of email open rates, a post-program survey, and attendance records, we found ...

abstract
Changes in K-8 Teacher Self-Efficacy with CS and Culturally Responsive Teaching through an RPP Workshop

This poster presents pilot results of a professional development (PD) workshop designed by a Research-Practice Partnership (RPP) that focused on helping K-8 teachers integrate computer science (CS) concepts into other content areas using culturally ...

abstract
Creating a Repository of Diversity and Inclusion Assignments for Computer Science

Computer science professionals have long been studying the gender gap and growing more aware of the lack of racial and ethnic diversity in the field. Recent years have also brought attention to issues of accessibility and inclusion. While faculty are ...

abstract
Touchless Hand Interaction and Machine Learning Agents to Support Kinesthetic Learning in Augmented Reality

Augmented Reality (AR) learning has successfully been proven to support new learning pedagogies. The pedagogical approach of Kinesthetic Learning or "Learning by Doing" using AR combined with virtual touchless hand interaction and machine learning ...

abstract
Using Machine Learning in Admissions: Reducing Human and Algorithmic Bias in the Selection Process

Diverse classrooms are linked to enhanced intellectual engagement and understanding of different perspectives. College admissions decisions have traditionally relied heavily on academic characteristics like GPA and standardized testing. Universities ...

abstract
Measuring Student Confidence from Tech Camp Participation

With recent efforts promoting computer science through industry, academic, and governmental partnerships, access to computing in high school curriculum has increased. However, a majority of high schools still do not offer computer science. While in-...

abstract
On-Line STEAM Outreach with Remote Robot Access

Hands-on programming of humanoid robots can be effectively utilized to motivate interest in science, technology, engineering, art, and mathematics for K-12 students. Constrained by pandemic restrictions, our academic and industry team developed and ...

abstract
Public Access
Colorado Strategic Approach to Rally Teachers

Colorado Strategic Approach to Rally Teachers (C-START) has provided computer science (CS) professional development to 1,425 K-12 teachers from 2016 to the present impacting over 7,000 students (who are ~33% female and 21% from other underrepresented ...

abstract
Towards an Instrument for CS Teacher Attitudes and Beliefs: Analysis of Component Factors from Foundational Professional Documents

In the quest to study and deliver Computer Science (CS) education reform, attention to gate-keeping teacher characteristics is imperative. Broad research in teacher education has demonstrated that teacher dispositions are an important driver of teacher ...

abstract
Pythonpad: Server-free Python Hands-on Exercise for Online Programming Classes

We propose Pythonpad, an open-source JavaScript library that supports web-based Python programming exercises. Unlike other standalone web-based programming tools, Pythonpad can be easily integrated into other websites. Although it runs learners' Python ...

abstract
Analyzing Students' Problem-Solving Abilities in a Virtual Network on the Cloud

While cybersecurity competitions are invaluable learning experiences for the individuals partaking in them, the competition environment might be able to help in understanding how individuals solve security problems. With this project, we have created a ...

Cited By

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    Hamouda S, Marshall L, Sanders K, Tshukudu E, Adelakun-Adeyemo O, Becker B, Dodoo E, Korsah G, Luvhengo S, Ola O, Parkinson J and Sanusi I Computing Education in African Countries: A Literature Review and Contextualised Learning Materials 2024 Working Group Reports on Innovation and Technology in Computer Science Education, (1-33)
  2. Zhu Y DPGame: Game-Based Learning for Dynamic Programming Algorithms Entertainment Computing – ICEC 2024, (276-285)
  3. Timms G and Guyon J (2022). From Zero to Python in 10.5 Hours: Building Foundational Programming Skills with Marine Biology Graduate Students and Researchers in an Introductory Workshop Series, Science & Technology Libraries, 10.1080/0194262X.2022.2116143, 42:3, (371-390), Online publication date: 3-Jul-2023.
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    Ojha V, Perdriau C, Lagesse B and Lewis C Computing Specializations: Perceptions of AI and Cybersecurity Among CS Students Proceedings of the 54th ACM Technical Symposium on Computer Science Education V. 1, (966-972)
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    Ren Y and Fisler K A Social Threat Modeling Framework to Structure Teaching about Responsible Computing Proceedings of the 54th ACM Technical Symposium on Computer Science Education V. 1, (402-408)
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    Buffardi K and Wang R Integrating Videos with Programming Practice Proceedings of the 27th ACM Conference on on Innovation and Technology in Computer Science Education Vol. 1, (241-247)
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    Spezialetti M and Garten B Add Some Action to the Output Proceedings of the 53rd ACM Technical Symposium on Computer Science Education V. 2, (1117-1117)
  8. ACM
    Buffardi K, Harris E and Wang R Codewit.us Proceedings of the 53rd ACM Technical Symposium on Computer Science Education - Volume 1, (780-786)
  9. ACM
    Fowler M, Smith D, Emeka C, West M and Zilles C Are We Fair? Proceedings of the 53rd ACM Technical Symposium on Computer Science Education - Volume 1, (647-653)
  10. ACM
    Siegel A, Zarb M, Alshaigy B, Blanchard J, Crick T, Glassey R, Hott J, Latulipe C, Riedesel C, Senapathi M, Simon and Williams D Teaching through a Global Pandemic Proceedings of the 2021 Working Group Reports on Innovation and Technology in Computer Science Education, (1-25)
Contributors
  • University of Virginia
  • Air Force Institute of Technology
  • Kalamazoo College
  • California State University, Long Beach
  • Monash University
  1. Proceedings of the 52nd ACM Technical Symposium on Computer Science Education

    Recommendations

    Acceptance Rates

    Overall Acceptance Rate 1,595 of 4,542 submissions, 35%
    YearSubmittedAcceptedRate
    SIGCSE '1952616932%
    SIGCSE '1845916135%
    SIGCSE '1734810530%
    SIGCSE '1629710535%
    SIGCSE '1528910536%
    SIGCSE '1427410839%
    SIGCSE '1329311138%
    SIGCSE '1228910035%
    SIGCSE '1131510734%
    SIGCSE '022347331%
    SIGCSE '012257835%
    SIGCSE '002207835%
    SIGCSE '991907037%
    SIGCSE '982017236%
    SIGCSE '971777542%
    SIGCSE '962057838%
    Overall4,5421,59535%