On the Impact of a Collaborative Pedagogy on African American Millennial Students in Software Engineering
May 1, 2007·,,,,·
0 min read
Laurie Williams
Lucas Layman
Kelli M. Slaten
Sarah B. Berenson
Carolyn Seaman
Abstract
Millennial students (those born after 1982), particularly African Americans and women, have demonstrated a propensity toward collaborative activities. We conducted a collective case study at North Carolina State University and North Carolina A&T to ascertain the role of collaboration and social interaction in attracting and retaining students in information technology. Responses from semi-structured interviews with 11 representative African American students in these classes were coded and analyzed. The responses from these minority students were used to evolve a social interaction model. The conjectures generated from the model suggest that pair programming and agile software methodologies effectively create a collaborative environment that is desirable to Millennial students, male and female, and, with the new evidence, minority and majority. Additionally, the African American Millennial students enjoy learning from their peers and believe that a collaborative environment better prepares them for the "real world".
Type
Publication
29th International Conference on Software Engineering (ICSE'07)
African American Millennial Students
Collaboration
Collaborative Software
Collaborative Work
Computer Science
Educational Institutions
Engineering Profession
Information Technology
North Carolina State University
Programming Profession
Software Engineering
Switches
Agile Software Methodologies
Collaborative Environment
Collaborative Pedagogy
Computer Aided Instruction
Computer Science Education
Groupware
Mypubs
Social Interaction Model