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Using HTML and JavaScript in introductory programming courses

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Published:01 March 1998Publication History

ABSTRACT

Students with little or no computer programming experience prior to entering college often have difficulty keeping up with the fast pace of college-level programming courses, even at the introductory level. For the past several years we have developed a curriculum for teaching fundamental language concepts to this population of individuals using the programmable features of a variety of software packages --- thus giving students nontrivial results with relatively little syntactic "overhead." These "pre-programming" courses prepare students to succeed in subsequent language sequences, or they can serve to provide computer literacy credits for non-technical majors.Here we report on a course designed to exploit students' burgeoning interest in the World Wide Web (WWW), where we used HTML and JavaScript to teach programming concepts. These languages allow students at different skill levels to work side by side, learning common abstract ideas while implementing them at different levels of complexity, motivated by the rewarding and exciting interactive environment of the WWW.

References

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            cover image ACM Conferences
            SIGCSE '98: Proceedings of the twenty-ninth SIGCSE technical symposium on Computer science education
            March 1998
            396 pages
            ISBN:0897919947
            DOI:10.1145/273133

            Copyright © 1998 ACM

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            Association for Computing Machinery

            New York, NY, United States

            Publication History

            • Published: 1 March 1998

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            SIGCSE '98 Paper Acceptance Rate72of201submissions,36%Overall Acceptance Rate1,595of4,542submissions,35%

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