Abstract

ABSTRACTBackground and ContextWe explore the potential for understanding the processes involved in students’ programming based on studying their behaviour and dialogue with each other and “conversations” with their programs.ObjectiveOur aim is to explore how a perspective of inquiry can be used as a point of departure for insights into how students learn to program.MethodWe completed a qualitative study situated in elective computer science classes in an upper secondary school in Norway. We collected data by video recording classroom interactions and used screen-recording software.FindingsOur findings include how we consider programs as both means and ends and reconsider the “error” in trial-and-error strategies, the role of error messages, and how programs are bound to context and particular moments in time.ImplicationsOur findings have implications for the ways we understand programs as mediating tools in research and apply them in the field of practice.

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