Abstract

This paper presents a Systematic Literature Review (SLR) of fifty-seven studies on Distributed Pair Programming (DPP) in higher education, identifying which studies investigated factors on the effectiveness of DPP as a method for learning programming, factors related to mediating and stimulating interactions between students, the measures/instruments used for exploring these factors, as well as the tools and their features. As DPP effectiveness is very promising as regards code quality and academic performance, the findings can contribute to a better understanding of how communication, collaboration and coordination are investigated. It was found that there are very few studies concerning compatibility, pair formation, and role contribution, the majority of which did not use data derived from students’ actions. Only a small number of studies used DPP tools with logging capabilities. Even though several IDEs and Eclipse plugins have been designed for DPP and offer specialized features, there are still studies which use a combination that include video conferencing and remote sharing tools along with various IDEs and auxiliary tools. This SLR can be of interest to educators that aim to apply DPP in educational settings, researchers designing informed empirical studies, as well as designers of DPP tools.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call