


default search action
ACM SIGCSE Bulletin, Volume 35
Volume 35, Number 1, January 2003
- Scott Grissom, Deborah Knox, Daniel T. Joyce, Wanda P. Dann:
Proceedings of the 34th SIGCSE Technical Symposium on Computer Science Education, SIGCSE 2003, Reno, Nevada, USA, February 19-23, 2003. ACM 2003, ISBN 1-58113-648-X [contents]
Volume 35, Number 2, June 2003
- Mark Guzdial, Elliot Soloway:
Computer science is more important than calculus: the challenge of living up to our potential. 5-8
- C. Dianne Martin:
Computing curricula 2001: reverse engineering a computer science curriculum (part 2). 9-10
- John A. N. Lee:
"Lee's law". 10-12
- Tony Clear:
Documentation and agile methods: striking a balance. 12-13
- John T. Gorgone:
Information technology accreditation criteria. 13-15
- Raymond Lister:
A research manifesto, and the relevance of phenomenography. 15-16
- Renée McCauley:
Resources for teaching and learning about human-computer interaction. 16-17
- Janet Hartman:
Corporate clips. 17-19
- Henry MacKay Walker:
Lessons from the CUPM. 19-21
- Judith L. Gersting, Frank H. Young:
Treating our students as adults. 21-22
- P. G. Thomas:
Examinations in computing over the Internet. 22-24
- Robert D. Campbell:
Cybersecurity. 24-26
- Jeffrey Popyack:
Scholarship, student awards, microbreweries, and baseball. 26-27
- Peter B. Henderson:
Inductive reasoning. 27-29
- David Ginat:
Sorting and disorders. 29-30
- Nick Parlante:
Platonic Euler solids. 30-31
- Carlos Iván Chesñevar, Maria Laura Cobo, William Yurcik:
Using theoretical computer simulators for formal languages and automata theory. 33-37 - Orit Hazzan:
Application of computer science ideas to the presentation of mathematical theorems and proofs. 38-42 - Ranjan Chaudhuri:
Do the arithmetic operations really execute in constant time? 43-44 - Trudy Howles:
Fostering the growth of a software quality culture. 45-47 - John F. Dooley:
Software engineering in the liberal arts: combining theory and practice. 48-51 - Louise E. Moses:
Design issues in the visual era. 52-56 - Michael A. Wirth:
E-notes: using electronic lecture notes to support active learning in computer science. 57-60 - Paula Gabbert:
Globalization and the computing curriculum. 61-65 - Lisa Jamba-Joyner, William Klostermeyer:
Predictors for success in a discrete math course. 66-69 - Kent White:
A comprehensive CMPS II semester project. 70-73 - Ross Grable:
Information characteristics for the curriculum. 74-77 - Nelishia Pillay:
Developing intelligent programming tutors for novice programmers. 78-82 - Michaelangelo Salcedo:
Faculty and the 21st century student in USA higher education. 83-87 - Jesse M. Heines:
Enabling XML storage from Java applets in a GUI programming course. 88-93 - Andrew T. Phillips, C. Alex Buerkle:
A computational science case study: classification of hybrids using genetic markers and maximum-likelihood estimates. 94-98 - Stephen P. Carl:
The treatment of deep vs. shallow copy in introductory C++ textbooks. 99-102 - Jonathan P. Bernick:
The Flo-and-Mac problem: a tool for encouraging undergraduate research. 103-106 - Mithun Acharya, Robert Funderlic:
'Laurel and Hardy' model for analyzing process synchronization algorithms and primitives. 107-110 - Philip J. Burton, Russel E. Bruhn:
Teaching programming in the OOP era. 111-114 - Torben Lorenzen:
The reverse trace: a programming tool. 115-116 - Timothy J. Rolfe:
Spreadsheet-aided numerical experimentation: analytic formula for Fibonacci numbers. 117-119 - John Mason:
Comments considered harmful. 120-122
- Thomas L. Naps, Guido Rößling, Vicki L. Almstrum, Wanda P. Dann, Rudolf Fleischer, Christopher D. Hundhausen, Ari Korhonen
, Lauri Malmi, Myles F. McNally, Susan H. Rodger, J. Ángel Velázquez-Iturbide
:
Exploring the role of visualization and engagement in computer science education. 131-152 - John P. Dougherty, Tom Dececchi, Tony Clear
, Brad Richards, Stephen Cooper, Tadeusz Wilusz:
Information technology fluency in practice. 153-171 - Martin Dick, Judy Sheard, Catherine C. Bareiss, Janet Carter, Donald Joyce, Trevor Harding, Cary Laxer:
Addressing student cheating: definitions and solutions. 172-184 - Peter B. Henderson, Lewis E. Hitchner, Jane Fritz, Bill Marion, Christelle Scharff, John Hamer, Charles Riedesel:
Materials development in support of mathematical thinking. 185-190 - Pamela B. Lawhead, Michaele E. Duncan, Constance G. Bland, Michael Goldweber, Madeleine Schep, David J. Barnes, Ralph G. Hollingsworth:
A road map for teaching introductory programming using LEGOcopyright mindstorms robots. 191-201
Volume 35, Number 3, September 2003
- Vassilios Dagdilelis, Maya Satratzemi, David Finkel, Roger D. Boyle, Georgios Evangelidis:
Proceedings of the 8th Annual SIGCSE Conference on Innovation and Technology in Computer Science Education, ITiCSE 2003, Thessaloniki, Greece, June 30 - July 2, 2003. ACM 2003, ISBN 1-58113-672-2 [contents]
Volume 35, Number 4, December 2003
- Christos H. Papadimitriou:
MythematiCS: in praise of storytelling in the teaching of computer science and math. 7-9
- Don Gotterbarn
:
Injectable computers: once more into the breach! the life cycle of computer ethics awareness. 10-11
- Michael R. Williams:
The computer history museum. 12-13
- Tony Clear:
The waterfall is dead..: long live the waterfall!! 13-14
- John T. Gorgone:
ABET's general accreditation criteria to apply to all computing programs. 14-16
- Raymond Lister:
The five orders of teaching ignorance. 16-17
- Renée McCauley:
Rubrics as assessment guides. 17-18
- Henry MacKay Walker:
Do computer games have a role in the computing classroom? 18-20
- Robert D. Campbell:
ACM two-year college education committee report. 20-21
- Jeffrey Popyack:
Scholarships, awards, advice, and the abacus. 21-23
- Peter B. Henderson:
More on inductive reasoning. 23-25
- David Ginat:
Board reconstruction. 25-26
- Nick Parlante:
Astrachan's law. 26-27
- Tami Lapidot, Orit Hazzan:
Methods of teaching a computer science course for prospective teachers. 29-34 - Jacqueline Wong, Timon Du:
Project-centered teaching on CBIS to IBBA students in Hong Kong. 35-38 - Juan Manuel Dodero
, Camino Fernández
, Daniel Sanz:
An experience on students' participation in blended vs. online styles of learning. 39-42 - Carol Traynor, Maria McKenna:
Service learning models connecting computer science to the community. 43-46 - Faith Clarke, Han Reichgelt:
The importance of explicitly stating educational objectives in computer science curricula. 47-50 - Theresa Beaubouef:
Why computer science students need language. 51-54 - Cindy H. Randall, Barbara A. Price, Han Reichgelt:
Women in computing programs: does the incredible shrinking pipeline apply to all computing programs? 55-59 - Sei-Jong Chung:
Network protocols: correcting transmission errors of up to two bits. 60-62 - Timothy J. Rolfe:
Program optimization: enforcement of local access and array access via pointers. 63-65 - Jonathan P. Bernick:
A translation of the one-to-one relationship for introductory relational database courses. 66-67 - Lisa J. Burnell, John W. Priest, John R. Durrett:
Assessment of a resource limited process for multidisciplinary projects. 68-71 - William S. Curran:
Teaching software engineering in the computer science curriculum. 72-75 - Michael M. Pickard, Jason R. Adams:
Model determination tool (MDT): a multipurpose software engineering learning utensil. 76-78 - Douglas Bell, Mehdi Mir-Ghasemi:
Teaching data structures using list boxes. 79-81 - Charles S. Saxon:
Object-oriented recursive descent parsing in C#. 82-85 - Kenny Hunt:
Using image processing to teach CS1 and CS2. 86-89 - Chenglie Hu:
A framework for applet animations with controls. 90-93 - Russel E. Bruhn, Philip J. Burton:
An approach to teaching Java using computers. 94-99
- Janet Carter, Kirsti Ala-Mutka
, Ursula Fuller, Martin Dick, John English, William Fone, Judy Sheard:
How shall we assess this? 107-123 - Thomas L. Naps, Stephen Cooper, Boris Koldehofe, Charles Leska, Guido Rößling, Wanda P. Dann, Ari Korhonen
, Lauri Malmi, Jarmo Rantakokko, Rockford J. Ross, Jay Anderson, Rudolf Fleischer, Marja Kuittinen, Myles F. McNally:
Evaluating the educational impact of visualization. 124-136 - Sylvia Alexander, Martyn Clark, Ken Loose, June Amillo, Mats Daniels, Roger D. Boyle, Cary Laxer, Dermot Shinners-Kennedy:
Case studies in admissions to and early performance in computer science degrees. 137-147

manage site settings
To protect your privacy, all features that rely on external API calls from your browser are turned off by default. You need to opt-in for them to become active. All settings here will be stored as cookies with your web browser. For more information see our F.A.Q.