English

Educating Programmers: A Reflection on Barriers to Deliberate Practice

Computers and Society 2013-11-05 v1

Abstract

Programming is a craft which often demands that learners engage in a significantly high level of individual practice and experimentation in order to acquire basic competencies. However, practice behaviours can be undermined during the early stages of instruction. This is often the result of seemingly trivial misconceptions that, when left unchecked, create cognitive-affective barriers. These interact with learners' self-beliefs, potentially inducing affective states that inhibit practice. This paper questions how to design a learning environment that can address this issue. It is proposed that analytical and adaptable approaches, which could include soft scaffolding, ongoing detailed informative feedback and a focus on self-enhancement alongside skill development, can help overcome such barriers.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1311.0390,
  title  = {Educating Programmers: A Reflection on Barriers to Deliberate Practice},
  author = {Michael James Scott and Gheorghita Ghinea},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1311.0390},
  year   = {2013}
}

Comments

Paper Presented at 2nd Annual HEA STEM Conference (Birmingham, UK, Apr. 17--18, '13), 6 Pages, 1 Table

R2 v1 2026-06-22T01:59:39.840Z