Journal: ACM SIGCSE Bulletin

Volume 41, Issue 4

6 -- 8Don Gotterbarn. Thinking professionally: When soon after is way too late: the deception of opt-out systems
8 -- 9Deepak Kumar. Reflections: Back to the future 100?
9 -- 12Tony Clear. Thinking issues: Strategies for answering examination questions: how do novice programmers build a theory of the program?
12 -- 13Heikki Topi. IS Education: The role of IS in computing education
13 -- 14Raymond Lister. CS Research: Book burning, naturally occurring data, and the stages of pedagogic grief
14 -- 16Henry MacKay Walker. Classroom issues: Grading and the allocation of points
16 -- 17Elizabeth K. Hawthorne. Community college corner: Upcoming computing education summit for community colleges
17 -- 18Marian Petre. Distance education: What our children can teach us about distance learning and learning programming
19 -- 20Lisa C. Kaczmarczyk. Percolations: Mind alterations: the IDE and their conceptual development
20 -- 21Jeffrey Popyack. Upsilon pi epsilon: New happenings
21 -- 22Peter B. Henderson. Math counts: Arguments, proofs, and ..
22 -- 23David Ginat. Colorful challenges: The lengthy 0-1
25 -- 29Feng-Jen Yang. Stopping a myth in artificial neural networks
30 -- 34William Mahoney, Jay Pedersen. Teaching compiler code generation: simpler is better
35 -- 39David Ginat. On the non-modular design of on-the-fly computations
40 -- 44Tom Goulding. An encryption system in assembly language: a game-like project for novice programmers
48 -- 52Nelishia Pillay. Learning difficulties experienced by students in a course on formal languages and automata theory
53 -- 56S. Maniccam. Sorting and searching using lisp, functional programming, and recursion
57 -- 61Steven Minsker. The classical/linear Hanoi hybrid problem: regular configurations
62 -- 65Stephen Cummins, Liz Burd, Andrew Hatch. Tag based feedback for programming courses
66 -- 70Nicola Ritter, Tanya J. McGill, Nik Thompson. Incremental submission of programming code using object-oriented classes
71 -- 75Alan G. Labouseur. A browser-based operating systems project: JavaScript adventures in dinosaur slaying
76 -- 77Walter William Milner. A broken metaphor in Java
78 -- 81Timothy J. Rolfe. The assignment problem: further exploring parallelism
82 -- 84John Santore, Torben Lorenzen, Robert Creed, David Murphy, Roger Orcutt. The software engineering class builds a GUI for subversion
85 -- 89Grace Ngai, Winnie W. Y. Lau, Stephen C. F. Chan, Hong Va Leong. On the implementation of self-assessment in an introductory programming course
90 -- 94James K. Huggins. Engaging computer science students through cooperative education
95 -- 98Miguel-Ángel Sicilia. How should transversal competence be introduced In computing education?
109 -- 125Stephen Cooper, Christine Nickell, Victor P. Piotrowski Jr., Brenda Oldfield, Ali Abdallah, Matt Bishop, Bill Caelli, Melissa Dark, Elizabeth K. Hawthorne, Lance J. Hoffman, Lance C. Pérez, Charles Pfleeger, Richard A. Raines, Corey D. Schou, Joel Brynielsson. An exploration of the current state of information assurance education
126 -- 143Jürgen Börstler, Mark S. Hall, Marie Nordström, James H. Paterson, Kate Sanders, Carsten Schulte, Lynda Thomas. An evaluation of object oriented example programs in introductory programming textbooks
144 -- 155Samuel Mann, Logan Muller, Janet Davis, Claudia Roda, Alison Young. Computing and sustainability: evaluating resources for educators
156 -- 173Raymond Lister, Tony Clear, Beth Simon, Dennis J. Bouvier, Paul Carter, Anna Eckerdal, Jana Jacková, Mike Lopez, Robert McCartney, Phil Robbins, Otto Seppälä, Errol Thompson. Naturally occurring data as research instrument: analyzing examination responses to study the novice programmer
174 -- 194Ursula Fuller, Joyce Currie Little, Bob Keim, Charles Riedesel, Diana Fitch, Su White. Perspectives on developing and assessing professional values in computing
195 -- 207Charles L. Isbell, Lynn Andrea Stein, Robb Cutler, Jeffrey Forbes, Linda Fraser, John Impagliazzo, Viera K. Proulx, Steve Russ, Richard Thomas, Yan Xu. (Re)defining computing curricula by (re)defining computing