Implicit Theories and Self-efficacy in an Introductory Programming Course
Abstract
Contribution: This study examined student effort and performance in an introductory programming course with respect to student-held implicit theories and self-efficacy. Background: Implicit theories and self-efficacy shed a light into understanding academic success, which must be considered when developing effective learning strategies for programming. Research Questions: Are implicit theories of intelligence and programming, and programming-efficacy related to each other and student success in programming? Is it possible to predict student course performance using a subset of these constructs? Methodology: Two consecutive surveys (N=100 and N=81) were administered to non-CS engineering students in I\c{s}{\i}k University. Findings: Implicit theories and self-beliefs are interrelated and correlated with effort, performance, and previous failures in the course and students explain failure in programming course with "programming-aptitude is fixed" theory, and also that programming is a difficult task for themselves.
Cite
@article{arxiv.1710.11559,
title = {Implicit Theories and Self-efficacy in an Introductory Programming Course},
author = {F. Boray Tek and Kristin S. Benli and Ezgi Deveci},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1710.11559},
year = {2018}
}
Comments
Programming Education. 8 pages