Lab Partners: If They're Good Enough for the Sciences, Why Aren't They Good Enough for Us?
Jul 1, 2007·,·
0 min read
Laurie Williams
Lucas Layman
Abstract
Despite many professed benefits of collaboration, some computer science educators feel students need to master work individually, particularly in the courses early in the curriculum that feed into software engineering courses. In the natural sciences, however, students almost always work with one or more partners in the laboratory. What can computer science educators learn about collaborative lab settings from our natural science counterparts? We conducted a survey of science and computer science educators to compare views and use of collaboration in their classes. The positive and negative aspects of collaboration, as reported by the natural science educators, are strikingly similar to those of computer science educators. These results suggest that computer science educators should be more open to the use of collaborative labs, as is done in the natural sciences, for the overall benefit to students.
Type
Publication
20th Conference on Software Engineering Education and Training (CSEET'07)
Biology
Chemistry
Collaboration
Collaborative Software
Collaborative Work
Computer Science
Laboratories
Physics
Programming Profession
Software Engineering
Collaborative Lab Settings
Computer Science Education
Computer Science Educators
Mypubs
Natural Science Educators
Natural Sciences Computing
Software Engineering Courses