Abstract

Student demographics have been changing on college campuses for many years, and to reflect the most efficient methods of teaching the current target population, many institutions are offering online introductory programming courses (CS1). Additionally, due to the increasing number of computing jobs and national demands, we are seeing a surge of nontraditional students (aged over 25), entering the online CS1 courses. We are at a large metropolitan public research university, Florida International University (FIU), where 30% of the students are non-traditional students. However, the online CS1 course usually consists of 70-75% of non-traditional students. We carried out a study in that course for the last 5 semesters where we interviewed non-traditional students to better understand their characteristics and how those are related to their learning goals and performance. This paper is just an attempt to identify the unique characteristics of non-traditional students that can help Computing-ED researchers and admins to design online CS1 courses with appropriate pedagogy, so a better learning experience can be provided to them and retention rates can be increased. Hence, in this paper, we report our preliminary findings on characteristics of non-traditional students who enroll in CS1 course, what their goals and expectations are-how that may differ based on their major (CS majors and non-majors), pre-CS1 programming experience, gender, and race/ethnicity.

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