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inroads (ACM SIGCSE Bulletin), Volume 10
Volume 10, Number 1, February 1978
- Alfs T. Berztiss, Henry Y. H. Chuang:

Proceedings of the 9th SIGCSE Technical Symposium on Computer Science Education, SIGCSE 1978, Pittsburgh, PA, USA, August 14-15, 1978. ACM 1978, ISBN 978-1-4503-7434-7 [contents]
Volume 10, Number 2, June 1978
- Kenneth Williams:

SIGCSE/CSA 1978 technical symposium report. 8-9 - Robert M. Aiken:

The 'Sister City Approach' - promoting transfer of technology. 10-11 - Jerald L. Ripley, Jarrell C. Grout, Denis M. Hyams:

The laboratory in a computer science program. 12-16 - George F. Corliss:

A search for interactive computer graphics lessons in numerical analysis. 17-20 - James M. Perry, Norman E. Sondak:

The project experience in undergraduate computer science education. 21-30 - Hatem M. Khalil, Leon S. Levy:

The academic image of computer science. 31-33 - David W. Embley:

Teaching disciplined Fortran programming via unfort. 34-38 - John Grant:

Individualized course in theoretical computer science. 39-41 - Abraham Waksman:

On the introduction of report generating system design concepts in an introductory course. 42-43 - Joel H. Gyllenskog:

Teaching operating systems design. 44-46 - Antonio M. Lopez Jr.:

An implementation of ACM curriculum 77. 47-52 - Howard Fosdick, Karen Mackey:

A pragmatic introductory course in COBOL: description and rationale. 53-58 - George Nagy

, L. Wilson:
Program portability from the perspective of students at the University of Nebraska. 59-62 - Keith W. Smillie:

An introductory computing science course for liberal arts students. 63-65 - Robert N. Chanon:

Educational AIDS. 66-69 - James S. Daley:

Basic2 - a preprocessed language. 70-73
Volume 10, Number 3, August 1978
- Kenneth Williams:

Papers of the SIGCSE/CSA technical symposium on Computer science education, SIGCSE/CSA 1978, Detroit, MI, USA, 1978. ACM 1978, ISBN 978-1-4503-7476-7 [contents]
Volume 10, Number 4, December 1978
- James D. Powell:

Use of model curricula in reviewing established programs. 12-15 - Peter B. Worlana:

Using the ACM computer science curriculum recommendations in a liberal arts college. 16-19 - Peter Calingaert:

Compiler course vs. translators course. 20-23 - J. Wayne Spence, Jarrell C. Grout:

Systems analysis and design in a computer science curriculum. 24-27 - John C. Hansen, Elizabeth A. Hansen, Kenneth H. Derus:

Team dynamics and the undergraduate curriculum. 28-29 - James E. Miller:

Iterations on an instructional method for utilizing the computer in the classroom. 30-31 - James L. Poirot:

Computers in law enforcement: a service course. 32-34 - S. Sitharama Iyengar

:
An experience with a computers and programming course at the graduate level in a computer science program. 35-36 - Lonny B. Winrich, Charles Glenn Petersen:

A pragmatic implementation of curriculum '77 at the University of Wisconsin: la crosse. 37-41 - Gary M. Abshire:

Techniques for computer science teachers. 42-46 - Randolph Nelson:

An approach to improved textbook writing. 47-51 - James S. Daley:

An inexpensive concurrent programming language for operating system construction. 52-55 - David Woodhouse:

Programming the Josephus problem. 56-58 - Richard A. Albright, Bruce D. Smith:

BRAINO: a machine language simulator. 59-65 - Jürg Nievergelt, Hans-Peter Frei, Helmar Burkhart, C. Jacobi, Bernhard Plattner, Hirotsugo Sugaya, B. Weibel, J. Weydert:

XS-0: a self-explanatory school computer. 66-69

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