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Benchmarking a set of exam questions for introductory programming

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conference contribution
posted on 2025-05-11, 09:45 authored by Judy Sheard, Simon, Julian Dermoudy, Daryl D'Souza, Minjie Hu, Dale Parsons
This paper reports on the combining of two related but hitherto distinct themes in programming education research. The first is the recognition that students in programming courses tend to perform far more poorly than their teachers would like, and further, more poorly than their teachers would expect without a careful analysis of their results. The second is the proposal of a number of different styles of examination question, sometimes coupled with analysis of student performance on those questions, typically at single institutions. This work combines these themes by including a common set of short questions in the final examinations of introductory programming courses at six institutions in Australia and New Zealand, and analysing the student performance across all six institutions. The analysis results in a set of four simple questions that can be used to benchmark student performance in introductory programming courses at a wide range of institutions.

History

Source title

Proceedings of the Sixteenth Australasian Computing Education Conference (ACE2014)

Name of conference

Australasian Computing Education Conference (ACE2014)

Location

Auckland, New Zealand

Start date

2014-01-27

End date

2014-01-30

Pagination

113-121

Publisher

Australian Computer Society

Place published

Darlinghurst

Language

  • en, English

College/Research Centre

Faculty of Science and Information Technology

School

School of Design, Communication and Information Technology

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