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ACM SIGCSE Bulletin, Volume 36
Volume 36, Number 1, February 2004
- Daniel T. Joyce, Deborah Knox, Wanda P. Dann, Thomas L. Naps:
Proceedings of the 35th SIGCSE Technical Symposium on Computer Science Education, SIGCSE 2004, Norfolk, Virginia, USA, March 3-7, 2004. ACM 2004, ISBN 1-58113-798-2 [contents]
Volume 36, Number 2, June 2004
- Wolfgang Coy:
Between the disciplines. 7-10
- C. Dianne Martin:
Lessons from Chernobyl for IT. 11
- Don Gotterbarn:
UML and agile methods: in support of irresponsible development. 11-13
- Michael R. Williams:
Does anyone remember the KDF-9? 13-14
- Tony Clear:
Software engineering and the academy: uncomfortable bedfellows? 14-15
- John T. Gorgone:
Draft information systems accreditation criteria for 2006. 15-17
- Raymond Lister:
Book review: computer science education research. 17-18
- Renée McCauley:
Thinking about our teaching. 18-19
- Henry MacKay Walker:
What teachers should, can, and cannot do. 20-21
- Robert D. Campbell:
Update on two-year college activity. 21-23
- Peter B. Henderson:
Modeling mania. 23-24
- David Ginat:
On the verge of an empty tank. 24-26
- Nick Parlante:
Graphics and Java. 26-27
- David Ginat:
Algorithmic patterns and the case of the sliding delta. 29-33 - Michael Huth:
Mathematics for the exploration of requirements. 34-39 - G. Michael Schneider:
A model for a three course introductory sequence. 40-43 - Alaaeldin A. Aly, Shakil Akhtar:
Cryptography and security protocols course for undergraduate IT students. 44-47 - Michael de Raadt, Mark A. Toleman, Richard Watson:
Training strategic problem solvers. 48-51 - Dave A. Berque, Ian Serlin, Atanas Vlahov:
A brief water excursion: introducing computer organization students to a water driven 1-bit half-adder. 52-56 - Orit Hazzan, Tami Lapidot:
Construction of a professional perception in the "methods of teaching computer science" course. 57-61 - Ranjan Chaudhuri:
Teaching bit-level algorithm analysis to the undergraduates in computer science. 62-63 - David Carlson:
Teaching computer security. 64-67 - Xuesong Zhang, Ken Surendran, Ming Wang:
A computer organization course project: simulation of a modern traffic signal system. 68-71 - Andrew K. Lui, Reggie Kwan, Maria Poon, Yannie H. Y. Cheung:
Saving weak programming students: applying constructivism in a first programming course. 72-76 - William H. Friedman:
Learning program organization through COBOL. 77-81 - Rachel Or-Bach, Ilana Lavy:
Cognitive activities of abstraction in object orientation: an empirical study. 82-86 - Russel E. Bruhn, Judy Camp:
Capstone course creates useful business products and corporate-ready students. 87-92 - Nicholas Ourusoff:
Reinvigorating the software engineering curriculum with Jackson's methods and ideas. 93-96 - Agustín Cernuda del Río:
How not to go about a programming assignment. 97-100 - Thomas G. Hill:
Excel grader and access grader. 101-105
Volume 36, Number 3, September 2004
- Roger D. Boyle, Martyn Clark, Amruth N. Kumar:
Proceedings of the 9th Annual SIGCSE Conference on Innovation and Technology in Computer Science Education, ITiCSE 2004, Leeds, UK, June 28-30, 2004. ACM 2004, ISBN 1-58113-836-9 [contents]
Volume 36, Number 4, December 2004
- Eden Miller Medina:
Beyond the ballot box: computer science education and social responsibility. 7-10
- C. Dianne Martin:
Draw a computer scientist. 11-12
- Michael R. Williams:
Survey calculations. 12-13
- Tony Clear:
Students becoming political and "incorrect" through agile methods. 13-15
- John T. Gorgone:
Information systems and the overview report for computing curricula 2004. 15-16
- Raymond Lister:
A clandestine religious meeting. 16-17
- Renée McCauley:
Outgoing links. 17-18
- Henry MacKay Walker:
Academic honesty in the classroom. 18-19
- Robert D. Campbell:
IT security and data assurance: a new resource for two-year colleges. 20
- Jeffrey L. Popyack:
Banner year for UPE. 21-22
- Peter B. Henderson:
Penny piles. 22-24
- David Ginat:
Helipad. 25-26
- Nick Parlante:
Niftiness. 26-27
- Kim B. Bruce:
Controversy on how to teach CS 1: a discussion on the SIGCSE-members mailing list. 29-34 - O. Yu. Bogoyavlenskaya:
Teaching networking congestion control. 35-41 - Susan M. Merritt, Allen Stix, Judith E. Sullivan, Fred Grossman, Charles C. Tappert, David A. Sachs:
Developing a professional doctorate in computing: a fifth-year assessment. 42-46 - Orit Hazzan, Tami Lapidot:
The practicum in computer science education: bridging gaps between theoretical knowledge and actual performance. 47-51 - James Canning, William Moloney, Ali Rafieymehr, Demetrio Rey:
Reading types in C using the right left walk method. 52-54 - Truman Parks Boyer, Mohsen Chitsaz:
ICE™ and ICE/T™: tools to assist in compiler design and implementation. 55-57 - Victor Matos, Becky Grasser:
SQL-based discovery of exact and approximate functional dependencies. 58-63 - Mark D. LeBlanc, Betsey D. Dyer:
Bioinformatics and computing curricula 2001: why computer science is well positioned in a post-genomic world. 64-68 - Gary N. Walker:
Experimentation in the computer programming lab. 69-72 - Elaine Wenderholm:
Challenges and the elements of success in undergraduate research. 73-75 - Denis Hamelin:
Searching the web to develop inquiry and collaborative skills. 76-79 - Mel Ó Cinnéide, Richard Tynan:
A problem-based approach to teaching design patterns. 80-82 - Timothy J. Rolfe, Paul W. Purdom:
An alternative problem for backtracking and bounding. 83-84 - Norman Jacobson, Alex Thornton:
It is time to emphasize arraylists over arrays in Java-based first programming courses. 88-92 - Nelishia Pillay:
A first course in genetic programming. 93-96 - Achuth Sankar S. Nair, T. Mahalakshmi:
Conceptualizing data structures: a pedagogic approach. 97-100 - Nathan Rountree, Janet Rountree, Anthony V. Robins, Robert Hannah:
Interacting factors that predict success and failure in a CS1 course. 101-104 - John Mason:
Teaching by analogy: the switch statement. 105-107 - Rose K. Shumba:
Towards a more effective way of teaching a cybersecurity basics course. 108-111
- Raymond Lister, Elizabeth S. Adams, Sue Fitzgerald, William Fone, John Hamer, Morten Lindholm, Robert McCartney, Jan Erik Moström, Kate Sanders, Otto Seppälä, Beth Simon, Lynda Thomas:
A multi-national study of reading and tracing skills in novice programmers. 119-150
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