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S4xE2: Physical Models of Java (Teaching Practice Byte)
Manage episode 394146481 series 2573661
Content provided by Kristin Stephens-Martinez. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Kristin Stephens-Martinez or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://ppacc.player.fm/legal.
Teaching Practice Byte (TPB): In our first TPB episode we invite Colleen Lewis back to the podcast to talk about her physical models of Java that help her teach students how Java objects work. Colleen was originally on our podcast way back in Season one! We go into detail about what kinds of classes she uses these models in, what the models are, how she uses them, where they would and would not work, and where the idea came from. See the transcript on the website (https://csedpodcast.org/blog/s4e2_tpb_physical_java_models/)
…
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38 episodes
Manage episode 394146481 series 2573661
Content provided by Kristin Stephens-Martinez. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Kristin Stephens-Martinez or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://ppacc.player.fm/legal.
Teaching Practice Byte (TPB): In our first TPB episode we invite Colleen Lewis back to the podcast to talk about her physical models of Java that help her teach students how Java objects work. Colleen was originally on our podcast way back in Season one! We go into detail about what kinds of classes she uses these models in, what the models are, how she uses them, where they would and would not work, and where the idea came from. See the transcript on the website (https://csedpodcast.org/blog/s4e2_tpb_physical_java_models/)
…
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38 episodes
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The CS-Ed Podcast

1 S4xE10: Scaffolding Project Team Communication, Including for Neurodivergence 31:22
31:22
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See the transcript on the website (https://csedpodcast.org/blog/s4e10_tpb_team_communication_neurodivergence/)
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The CS-Ed Podcast

1 S4xE9: Academic Mentoring with Valerie Taylor 48:50
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See the transcript on the website (https://csedpodcast.org/blog/s4e9_academic_mentoring/)
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The CS-Ed Podcast

1 S4xE8: Multi-Part Question and Answer (Teaching Practice Byte) 22:39
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Dr. Luther Tychonievich from the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign shares with us his multi-step Q&A process where he solicits questions from his students to get more diverse questions and strongly signals to them that he wants questions. Dr. Tychonievich goes into detail about how to shorten the exercise if you have less time, as well as considerations and ways to respond to the questions when an answer is not necessarily appropriate. See the transcript on the website (https://csedpodcast.org/blog/s4e8_tpb_multi_part_q_a/)…
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The CS-Ed Podcast

In this episode, we got to continue talking to Dr. Beth Simon about peer instruction from the prior episode's peer instruction Teaching Practice Byte. Our host, Kristin Stephens-Martinez, shares her experience with peer instruction and asks Beth for help to improve. The episode ends with three main takeaways that Kristin has since used in her course. See the transcript on the website (https://csedpodcast.org/blog/s4e7_peer_instruction/)…
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The CS-Ed Podcast

1 S4xE6: Peer Instruction (Teaching Practice Byte) 22:17
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Peer instruction is a way to move the easy-to-learn content to before lecture, so you can spend more time during lecture on developing understanding. In this teaching practice byte, we talk to Dr. Beth Simon from UC San Diego about peer instruction, what context she's used it in, how she does it, and nuanced details that aren't always discussed when reading about this active learning technique. See the transcript on the website (https://csedpodcast.org/blog/s4e6_tpb_peer_instruction/)…
In this episode, we have Dr. Barbara Ericson, assistant professor from the School of Information at the University of Michigan. Our topic is Parson's Problems, which are like mixed-up code chunks that students need to put in the correct places. We discuss the research behind them, how she uses them in her class, and her current work investigating how to use Parson's Problems to improve student learning. See the transcript on the website (https://csedpodcast.org/blog/s4e5_parsons_problems/)…
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The CS-Ed Podcast

1 S4xE4: Teaching Practice Byte: Coding Tutor 22:17
22:17
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Philip Guo, an Associate Professor of Cognitive Science at the University of California, San Diego, built Python Tutor, which is neither just for Python nor really a tutor. It's actually a tool to visualize what code is doing! In today's episode, he talks about the other programming languages it supports (Java, C, and C++), gives examples of how he uses it, and explains the nuances of when to use it. See the transcript on the website (https://csedpodcast.org/blog/s4e4_tpb_coding_tutor/)…
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The CS-Ed Podcast

1 S4xE3: What is in a Teaching Faculty Job Title? 33:34
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In this episode, we talk with Professor Adam Blank, Teaching Professor of Computing and Mathematical Sciences at Caltech. Our conversation focuses on college teaching faculty that only have a master's degree by discussing how the job title should be about a person's skills and knowledge, as opposed to the degrees they hold. We start off by defining terms, then move on to what a teaching faculty actually does and needs to know to do the job and how a Ph.D. is a proxy for signals that could be seen with different evidence. See the transcript on the website (https://csedpodcast.org/blog/s4e3_teaching_faculty_job_title/)…
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The CS-Ed Podcast

1 S4xE2: Physical Models of Java (Teaching Practice Byte) 25:30
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Teaching Practice Byte (TPB): In our first TPB episode we invite Colleen Lewis back to the podcast to talk about her physical models of Java that help her teach students how Java objects work. Colleen was originally on our podcast way back in Season one! We go into detail about what kinds of classes she uses these models in, what the models are, how she uses them, where they would and would not work, and where the idea came from. See the transcript on the website (https://csedpodcast.org/blog/s4e2_tpb_physical_java_models/)…
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The CS-Ed Podcast

We are kicking off season 4 with a deep conversation on academic misconduct with Dr. Oluwakemi Ola from the University of British Columbia, Vancouver Canada, and Dr. Mia Minnes from the University of California, San Diego. This episode was inspired from a panel we were on at the 2023 SIGCSE Technical Symposium called "Who's Cheating Whom: Changing the Narrative Around Academic Misconduct." In this episode, we go into more detail as we discuss how academic misconduct is handled at our respective institutions, how it impacts us, how our thinking about misconduct has changed over time, what we do to teach our students about misconduct, and how the systems around us influence our and the students' decisions around misconduct. See the transcript on the website (https://csedpodcast.org/blog/s4e1_academic_misconduct/)…
Hello All! This is the CS-Ed Podcast. A podcast where we talk with educators about teaching computer science! We are gearing up for season 4 and we have big plans! First, we've created a Patreon! Yes, that's right, the podcast is moving to become self-sustaining through audience support. If you'd like to keep this podcast ad and sponsor free, please consider becoming a Patreon member. Of course, please only chip in within your financial abilities. Think of it as buying the podcast a coffee or lunch once a month. I try to keep costs down to a minimum, but there are still costs to producing this podcast, even if I'm not paying myself. Your support would be much appreciated. Patreon members will get direct access to me to give feedback on the podcast, and I'll post exclusive content on what's coming up! You can find us at patreon.com/csedpodcast, that's patreon.com/csedpodcast. The link is also in this podcast description and on our website. In addition, mixed in with our usual long-form deep conversations, we are going to bring in a new kind of episode TPB's, teaching practice bytes, that's bytes with a Y! Where I talk with a fellow CS educator about a practice they have in their classroom. And this is where you come in, my dear audience members. If you have or know someone with a good teaching practice, I'd love to hear about it! Please reach out to the podcast's email address at csedpodcast@gmail.com or my own email address at ksm@cs.duke.edu And that's it for now. Please look out for the first episode of season 4 coming out soon. We are talking academic misconduct! Also, consider joining our Patreon at patreon.com/csedpodcast, and please reach out if you've got a good teaching tip or practice you'd like to share. Take care of yourself, and you'll hear from me again in this podcast feed soon.…
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The CS-Ed Podcast

1 S3xE12: Socially Responsible Computing UTA Program 43:16
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How do you infuse a class to engage students with socially responsible computing? Kathi Fisler from Brown University discusses Brown’s undergraduate teaching assistant (UTA) program, where they hired UTAs to specifically focus on finding ways to do just that in the classes they were embedded in. In this episode, we talk about the program, how she teaches socially responsible computing in her intro computer science (CS) classes, and how her goal is to get students to ask the right questions. While she also lets go of needing to know the answers or even how to answer the questions. See the transcript on the website (https://csedpodcast.org/blog/s3ep12_socially_responsible_computing/)…
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The CS-Ed Podcast

This episode features Amy Ko et al.'s online book Critically Conscious Computing: Methods for Secondary Education. We discuss with Amy what is in the book, who the book is for, and how educators can use the book in their own teaching. The book focuses on contextualizing the history of computer science and how that history shows that computing is not neutral. In addition, it provides unit sketches to help teachers bring in more design critical conscious discussion into how they teach CS that will hopefully help all of our students better understand how computing affects our world. See the transcript on the website (https://csedpodcast.org/blog/s3ep11_critically_conscious_computing/)…
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The CS-Ed Podcast

1 S3xE10: Primarily Undergraduate Institutions with Iris Howley 43:14
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Join us in a conversation with Iris Howley from Williams College about Primarily Undergrad Institutions (PUIs). Where we talk about what a PUI is, the research and teaching expectations, what the interview cycle is like, and compare a PUI professor with a teaching track professor. The biggest takeaway from this episode is that PUIs exist, they don't look like the school someone is getting their Ph.D. at, and they are an option post-graduation. More info is at http://bit.ly/cspui-jobs Finally, make sure to check the deadlines soon. They usually interview in the fall! See the transcript on the website (https://csedpodcast.org/blog/s3ep10_primarily_undergraduate_institutions/)…
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The CS-Ed Podcast

1 S3xE9: Peer Teaching Summit at SIGCSE TS 2022 43:04
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In this episode, Sarah Heckman from North Carolina State University and our host discuss the Peer Teaching Summit at SIGCSE Technical Symposium 2022. We cover what a peer teacher is, more commonly known as an undergraduate or graduate teaching assistant, and how they support student help-seeking. The summit brought together many people with peer teachers at their schools where they discussed what they can and cannot do, and how every school is unique. Afterward, we focused on office hours and how there was a surprising variety of handling them, including what information students see in the office hour queuing app while they wait in the queue, what information peer teachers see, and the rules the peer teachers use to decide who is pulled off the queue next. See the transcript on the website (https://csedpodcast.org/blog/s3e9_peer_teaching/)…
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