Unplugged Programming: The future of teaching computational thinking?
Abstract: We currently live in digital times, with educators increasingly coming to realise the need to prepare students to productively participate in such a coding-infused society. Computational Th inking (CT) has emerged as an essential skill in this regard. As with any new skill, the ways it is...
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Charles University, Faculty of Education
2018-12-01
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doaj-010066f416d14806b212d8080202f9992020-11-25T03:56:30ZcesCharles University, Faculty of EducationPedagogika0031-38152336-21892018-12-01683Unplugged Programming: The future of teaching computational thinking?George ArandaJoseph Paul Ferguson Abstract: We currently live in digital times, with educators increasingly coming to realise the need to prepare students to productively participate in such a coding-infused society. Computational Th inking (CT) has emerged as an essential skill in this regard. As with any new skill, the ways it is theorised and practiced vary greatly. In this paper, we argue for the importance of Unplugged Programming (UP) as a hands-on and practical approach to teaching and learning, which emphasises embodied and distributed cognition. UP has the potential to open up what it means to enact CT in the classroom when computational devices are put to the side. Preparing for the issues of the future is a matter of reconnecting with the past, in particular with ideas such as epistemological pluralism. By appreciating the diversity of ways that students can undertake CT and teachers can support them in doing so – from coding with digital devices to pencil-and-paper programming – we can work to make the classroom a place in which students can explore and undertake CT in rich and diverse ways. https://ojs.cuni.cz/pedagogika/article/view/1305computational thinking, unplugged programming, coding, epistemology, distributed cognition, embodied cognition |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
ces |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
George Aranda Joseph Paul Ferguson |
spellingShingle |
George Aranda Joseph Paul Ferguson Unplugged Programming: The future of teaching computational thinking? Pedagogika computational thinking, unplugged programming, coding, epistemology, distributed cognition, embodied cognition |
author_facet |
George Aranda Joseph Paul Ferguson |
author_sort |
George Aranda |
title |
Unplugged Programming: The future of teaching computational thinking? |
title_short |
Unplugged Programming: The future of teaching computational thinking? |
title_full |
Unplugged Programming: The future of teaching computational thinking? |
title_fullStr |
Unplugged Programming: The future of teaching computational thinking? |
title_full_unstemmed |
Unplugged Programming: The future of teaching computational thinking? |
title_sort |
unplugged programming: the future of teaching computational thinking? |
publisher |
Charles University, Faculty of Education |
series |
Pedagogika |
issn |
0031-3815 2336-2189 |
publishDate |
2018-12-01 |
description |
Abstract: We currently live in digital times, with educators increasingly coming to realise the need to prepare students to productively participate in such a coding-infused society. Computational Th inking (CT) has emerged as an essential skill in this regard. As with any new skill, the ways it is theorised and practiced vary greatly. In this paper, we argue for the importance of Unplugged Programming (UP) as a hands-on and practical approach to teaching and learning, which emphasises embodied and distributed cognition. UP has the potential to open up what it means to enact CT in the classroom when computational devices are put to the side. Preparing for the issues of the future is a matter of reconnecting with the past, in particular with ideas such as epistemological pluralism. By appreciating the diversity of ways that students can undertake CT and teachers can support them in doing so – from coding with digital devices to pencil-and-paper programming – we can work to make the classroom a place in which students can explore and undertake CT in rich and diverse ways.
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topic |
computational thinking, unplugged programming, coding, epistemology, distributed cognition, embodied cognition |
url |
https://ojs.cuni.cz/pedagogika/article/view/1305 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT georgearanda unpluggedprogrammingthefutureofteachingcomputationalthinking AT josephpaulferguson unpluggedprogrammingthefutureofteachingcomputationalthinking |
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