Procrastination vs. Active Delay: How Students Prepare to Code in Introductory Programming
When students procrastinate on programming assignments, it can hinder the quality of their code and negatively impact their grades. In contrast, when students actively delay working on assignments to prepare to code (e.g., reading or seeking help), it can be an effective self-regulated learning (SRL) strategy beneficial to programming performance. However, distinguishing active delay from procrastination is methodologically challenging. To address this, we tracked what students did when they behaviorally delayed starting an assignment. Most students prepared to code by using multiple course resources across programming assignments. We found that many students delayed starting to code by seeking help in the Q&A platform, and this was beneficial to the quality of their code. Also, some pre-coding activities were related to behavioral delay in starting to code, but benefitted students’ grades, and thus may indicate active delay, but not all pre-coding activities were beneficial. By considering pre-coding activities, we gain a comprehensive view of students’ approach to coding in CS education.
Thu 21 MarDisplayed time zone: Pacific Time (US & Canada) change
13:45 - 15:00 | |||
13:45 25mTalk | ClearMind Workshop: An ACT-based Intervention Tailored for Academic Procrastination among Computing Students Papers Yunyi She University of California, San Diego, Korena Klimczak Utah State University, Michael Levin Utah State University, Soohyun Liao University of California in San Diego DOI | ||
14:10 25mTalk | Procrastination vs. Active Delay: How Students Prepare to Code in Introductory Programming Papers Elizabeth B. Cloude University of Pennsylvania, Jiayi Zhang University Pennsylvania, Ryan Baker University of Pennsylvania, Eric Fouh University of Pennsylvania DOI | ||
14:35 25mTalk | Learners Teaching Novices: An Uplifting Alternative AssessmentGlobal Papers Ali Malik Stanford University, Juliette Woodrow Stanford University, Chris Piech Stanford University DOI |