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Into the Heat of the Debate: Simulating a Program Committee Within Computer Science Education

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Into the Heat of the Debate: Simulating a Program Committee Within Computer Science Education. / Maesschalck, Sam; Bradbury, Matthew; Giotsas, Vasileios.
IEEE Global Engineering Education Conference (EDUCON). 2023. ed. IEEE, 2023.

Research output: Contribution in Book/Report/Proceedings - With ISBN/ISSNConference contribution/Paperpeer-review

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Maesschalck S, Bradbury M, Giotsas V. Into the Heat of the Debate: Simulating a Program Committee Within Computer Science Education. In IEEE Global Engineering Education Conference (EDUCON). 2023 ed. IEEE. 2023 doi: 10.1109/EDUCON54358.2023.10125275

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Bibtex

@inproceedings{3485a14a215f474ca25bd4ad04cecabf,
title = "Into the Heat of the Debate: Simulating a Program Committee Within Computer Science Education",
abstract = "There are many teaching strategies in higher education; one of these is discussion-based teaching which aims to stimulate conversation and peer learning. Although this teaching strategy has many benefits for students, such as learning how to argue, it has not gained much traction in STEM subjects like Computer Science. However, soft skills have become increasingly important within these fields. A focus when recruiting for roles is not only on hard skills such as programming but also on the ability to communicate well with stakeholders. This paper explores and evaluates an approach to incorporate discussion-based teaching within computer science education, focusing on teaching hard and soft skills. To achieve this, we organised an emulated program committee type of activity for MSc students at our university. We evaluated the activity by asking the students to complete a survey and followed this up by interviewing several students to gather more in-depth reactions from the cohort. The results show that students feel they learnt about the topics tackled within the papers we have chosen, gained more confidence to tackle paper writing, understood the requirements of academic work, and improved their soft skills such as academic writing. The interviews show that students thoroughly enjoyed the activity and are keen to have more interactive discussion sessions like this.",
author = "Sam Maesschalck and Matthew Bradbury and Vasileios Giotsas",
year = "2023",
month = may,
day = "22",
doi = "10.1109/EDUCON54358.2023.10125275",
language = "English",
booktitle = "IEEE Global Engineering Education Conference (EDUCON)",
publisher = "IEEE",
edition = "2023",

}

RIS

TY - GEN

T1 - Into the Heat of the Debate

T2 - Simulating a Program Committee Within Computer Science Education

AU - Maesschalck, Sam

AU - Bradbury, Matthew

AU - Giotsas, Vasileios

PY - 2023/5/22

Y1 - 2023/5/22

N2 - There are many teaching strategies in higher education; one of these is discussion-based teaching which aims to stimulate conversation and peer learning. Although this teaching strategy has many benefits for students, such as learning how to argue, it has not gained much traction in STEM subjects like Computer Science. However, soft skills have become increasingly important within these fields. A focus when recruiting for roles is not only on hard skills such as programming but also on the ability to communicate well with stakeholders. This paper explores and evaluates an approach to incorporate discussion-based teaching within computer science education, focusing on teaching hard and soft skills. To achieve this, we organised an emulated program committee type of activity for MSc students at our university. We evaluated the activity by asking the students to complete a survey and followed this up by interviewing several students to gather more in-depth reactions from the cohort. The results show that students feel they learnt about the topics tackled within the papers we have chosen, gained more confidence to tackle paper writing, understood the requirements of academic work, and improved their soft skills such as academic writing. The interviews show that students thoroughly enjoyed the activity and are keen to have more interactive discussion sessions like this.

AB - There are many teaching strategies in higher education; one of these is discussion-based teaching which aims to stimulate conversation and peer learning. Although this teaching strategy has many benefits for students, such as learning how to argue, it has not gained much traction in STEM subjects like Computer Science. However, soft skills have become increasingly important within these fields. A focus when recruiting for roles is not only on hard skills such as programming but also on the ability to communicate well with stakeholders. This paper explores and evaluates an approach to incorporate discussion-based teaching within computer science education, focusing on teaching hard and soft skills. To achieve this, we organised an emulated program committee type of activity for MSc students at our university. We evaluated the activity by asking the students to complete a survey and followed this up by interviewing several students to gather more in-depth reactions from the cohort. The results show that students feel they learnt about the topics tackled within the papers we have chosen, gained more confidence to tackle paper writing, understood the requirements of academic work, and improved their soft skills such as academic writing. The interviews show that students thoroughly enjoyed the activity and are keen to have more interactive discussion sessions like this.

U2 - 10.1109/EDUCON54358.2023.10125275

DO - 10.1109/EDUCON54358.2023.10125275

M3 - Conference contribution/Paper

BT - IEEE Global Engineering Education Conference (EDUCON)

PB - IEEE

ER -