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ACM SIGCSE Bulletin, Volume 38
Volume 38, Number 1, March 2006
- Doug Baldwin, Paul T. Tymann, Susan M. Haller, Ingrid Russell:
Proceedings of the 37th SIGCSE Technical Symposium on Computer Science Education, SIGCSE 2006, Houston, Texas, USA, March 3-5, 2006. ACM 2006, ISBN 1-59593-259-3 [contents]
Volume 38, Number 2, June 2006
- Sara Saeed Bilal, Fatma Hassan Al Amir, C. Dianne Martin:
Ethics and professionalism for an IT professional in the UAE. 6-7
- Donald Gotterbarn:
The shinning face of plagiarism: the graying of an issue. 7-8
- Tony Clear:
On the necessity of removing "cruelty" from the teaching of computing. 8-10
- John T. Gorgone:
Graduate curriculum now available. 10-11
- Raymond Lister:
Call me Ishmael: Charles Dickens meets Moby Book. 11-13
- Henry MacKay Walker:
Thoughts about lecturing. 13-15
- Robert D. Campbell:
Information technology: ... a program of study. 15-16
- Gordon Davies:
On the merits of e-learning. 16-17
- Peter B. Henderson:
The Josephus Flavius' problem. 17-20
- David Ginat:
Graph cycles. 20-22
- John Impagliazzo:
Meet our columnists for this issue. 23 - Jeffrey J. McConnell:
Active and cooperative learning: further tips and tricks (part 3). 24-28 - Thomas A. Standish, Norman Jacobson:
Using O(n) ProxmapSort and O(1) ProxmapSearch to motivate CS2 students, Part II. 29-32 - LieJune Shiau:
An application of vector space theory in data transmission. 33-36 - Timothy J. Rolfe:
Las Vegas does n-queens. 37-38 - Jens Bennedsen, Michael E. Caspersen:
Abstraction ability as an indicator of success for learning object-oriented programming? 39-43 - Peter Brusilovsky, Jonathan Grady, Michael Spring, Chul-Hwan Lee:
What should be visualized?: faculty perception of priority topics for program visualization. 44-48 - Nell B. Dale:
Most difficult topics in CS1: results of an online survey of educators. 49-53 - Renée McCauley, Christopher W. Starr, Walter Pharr, RoxAnn H. Stalvey, George J. Pothering:
Is CS1 better with the same lecture and lab instructor? 54-60 - Bradley K. Jensen, Melinda Cline, Carl Stephen Guynes:
Teaching the undergraduate CS Information Security Course. 61-63 - Paul Grisham, Herb Krasner, Dewayne E. Perry:
Data Engineering education with real-world projects. 64-68 - Torben Lorenzen, Hang-Ling Chang:
MasterMind: a predictor of computer programming aptitude. 69-71 - Orit Hazzan, Tami Lapidot:
Social issues of Computer Science in the "Methods of Teaching Computer Science in the High School" course. 72-75 - Daryl H. Hepting:
Ethics and usability testing in computer science education. 76-80 - Aristidis Ilias, Maria Kordaki:
Undergraduate studies in computer science and engineering: gender issues. 81-85 - Chenglie Hu:
When to use an interface? 86-90 - Cindy H. Randall, Barbara A. Price:
Desirable attributes for computing graduates: is there agreement? 91-96 - Clifford A. Shaffer:
Experiences teaching a graduate research methods course. 97-101 - Rose K. Shumba:
The development of a Human Computer Interaction course at a senior synthesis course. 102-104 - Yang Wang:
It is time for a computer application degree. 105-109 - Mark Ryan del Moral Talabis:
Honeynet learning: discovering IT security. 110-114 - Gireesh K. Gupta:
Computer literacy: essential in today's computer-centric world. 115-119
- John T. Gorgone, Paul Gray, Edward A. Stohr, Joseph S. Valacich, Rolf T. Wigand:
MSIS 2006: model curriculum and guidelines for graduate degree programs in information systems. 121-196
Volume 38, Number 3, September 2006
- Renzo Davoli, Michael Goldweber, Paola Salomoni:
Proceedings of the 11th Annual SIGCSE Conference on Innovation and Technology in Computer Science Education, ITiCSE 2006, Bologna, Italy, June 26-28, 2006. ACM 2006, ISBN 1-59593-055-8 [contents]
Volume 38, Number 4, December 2006
- Sara Saeed Bilal, Habib Al Mutawa, Fatma Hassan Al Amir, C. Dianne Martin:
Reflections on being a new female IT professional in the UAE. 6
- Don Gotterbarn:
E-voting: a failure of professionalism? 7-8
- Tony Clear:
Google™ - "do no evil": yeah right! 8-10
- John T. Gorgone:
Masters level accreditation for information systems. 10-11
- Raymond Lister:
One room, four meetings. 11-13
- Henry MacKay Walker:
Thoughts on student feedback to help teaching. 13-14
- Robert D. Campbell:
Associate-degree transfer curriculum in computer engineering. 15
- Judith Gal-Ezer:
The open University of Israel: a distance education institution. 16-17
- A. Joe Turner:
What is IFIP? 17-18
- Lisa C. Kaczmarczyk:
The ubiquity of computing may be education's biggest challenge. 18-19
- Peter B. Henderson, Rachelle DeCoste, Kevin L. Huggins:
Preparing to teach discrete math for the first time. 20-21
- David Ginat:
Hidden squares. 22-23
- Jeffrey J. McConnell:
Active and cooperative learning: final tips and tricks (part IV). 25-28 - Christa M. Chewar, Kevin L. Huggins, Jean R. S. Blair:
Avoiding the pratfalls of program assessment. 29-33 - Gudmund Skovbjerg Frandsen, Michael I. Schwartzbach:
A singular choice for multiple choice. 34-38 - Michal Armoni:
On the role of proofs in a course on design and analysis of algorithms. 39-42 - Jeffrey A. Stone:
Using a machine language simulator to teach CS1 concepts. 43-45 - Germán González-Morris:
Further thoughts on backtracking and bounding. 46-47 - John Buerck, David Feig:
Knowledge discovery and dissemination: a curriculum model for informatics. 48-51 - Alireza Ebrahimi, Christina Schweikert:
Empirical study of novice programming with plans and objects. 52-54 - Mariana Teif, Orit Hazzan:
Partonomy and taxonomy in object-oriented thinking: junior high school students' perceptions of object-oriented basic concepts. 55-60 - Torben Lorenzen, Abdul Sattar:
Teach graphics using excel in place of a graphing calculator. 61-63 - Henry Neeman, Lloyd Lee, Julia S. Mullen, Gerard Newman:
Analogies for teaching parallel computing to inexperienced programmers. 64-67 - Abdul Sattar, Torben Lorenzen:
Develop a shopping mart web application. 68-70 - Emmanuel Udoh:
Teaching database in an integrated oracle environment. 71-74 - Mordechai Ben-Ari:
McKinley's Amazon. 75-77 - Katrin Becker:
How much choice is too much? 78-82 - Timothy J. Rolfe:
Classroom exercise demonstrating linked list operations. 83-84 - Andrew A. Thompson:
Approaches to recruiting and retaining in computer-science based student organizations. 85-87
- Hilary J. Holz, Anne Gates Applin, Bruria Haberman, Donald Joyce, Helen C. Purchase, Catherine Reed:
Research methods in computing: what are they, and how should we teach them? 96-114 - Ursula Fuller, Arnold Pears, June Amillo, Chris Avram, Linda Mannila:
A computing perspective on the Bologna process. 115-131 - Vicki L. Almstrum, Peter B. Henderson, Valerie J. Harvey, Cinda Heeren, William A. Marion, Charles Riedesel, Leen-Kiat Soh, Allison Elliott Tew:
Concept inventories in computer science for the topic discrete mathematics. 132-145 - Raymond Lister, Anders Berglund, Tony Clear, Joe Bergin, Kathy Garvin-Doxas, Brian Hanks, Lewis E. Hitchner, Andrew Luxton-Reilly, Kate Sanders, Carsten Schulte, Jacqueline L. Whalley:
Research perspectives on the objects-early debate. 146-165 - Guido Rößling, Thomas L. Naps, Mark S. Hall, Ville Karavirta, Andreas Kerren, Charles Leska, Andrés Moreno, Rainer Oechsle, Susan H. Rodger, Jaime Urquiza-Fuentes, J. Ángel Velázquez-Iturbide:
Merging interactive visualizations with hypertextbooks and course management. 166-181 - Jerry Mead, Simon Gray, John Hamer, Richard James, Juha Sorva, Caroline St. Clair, Lynda Thomas:
A cognitive approach to identifying measurable milestones for programming skill acquisition. 182-194
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