Writing across the computer science curriculum
SIGCSE '96 Proceedings of the twenty-seventh SIGCSE technical symposium on Computer science education
Basic Business Statistics: Concepts and Applications
Basic Business Statistics: Concepts and Applications
A technical writing class for computer science majors: measuring student perceptions of learning
SIGCSE '03 Proceedings of the 34th SIGCSE technical symposium on Computer science education
A professional practice component in writing: a simple way to enhance an existing course
Journal of Computing Sciences in Colleges
Research, teaching, and service: the miniconference as a model for CS graduate seminar courses
Proceedings of the 35th SIGCSE technical symposium on Computer science education
Bridging writing to learn and writing in the discipline in computer science education
Proceedings of the 37th SIGCSE technical symposium on Computer science education
A framework in which to teach (technical) communication to computer science majors
Proceedings of the 37th SIGCSE technical symposium on Computer science education
Writing for computer science: a taxonomy of writing tasks and general advice
Journal of Computing Sciences in Colleges
Take a WAC at writing in your course
Proceedings of the 8th ACM SIGITE conference on Information technology education
Proceedings of the 8th ACM SIGITE conference on Information technology education
Exposing GAPS, exploring legacies: paradoxes of writing use in computing education
Journal of Computing Sciences in Colleges
The student view on online peer reviews
ITiCSE '09 Proceedings of the 14th annual ACM SIGCSE conference on Innovation and technology in computer science education
Learning writing by reviewing in science
CSCL'07 Proceedings of the 8th iternational conference on Computer supported collaborative learning
Writing in an upper-level CS course
Proceedings of the 41st ACM technical symposium on Computer science education
An engineering approach to teaching writing.
Proceedings of the 42nd ACM technical symposium on Computer science education
Getting CS undergraduates to communicate effectively
Proceedings of the 16th annual joint conference on Innovation and technology in computer science education
Proceedings of the 11th Brazilian Symposium on Human Factors in Computing Systems
Workplace scenarios to integrate communication skills and content: a case study
Proceedings of the 45th ACM technical symposium on Computer science education
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Employers of computing graduates have high expectations of graduates in terms of soft skills, the most desirable of these being communication skills. Not only must the graduates exhibit writing skills, but they are expected to be highly proficient therein. The consequence of this expectation is not only performance pressure exerted on the graduate, but also the laying down of a challenge at the door of computing instructors to encourage and instil successfully the art of writing in the graduate. Varied and numerous initiatives have been launched in the computing discipline to address this particular challenge over the past few decades. Despite documented success on the many experiences of incorporating writing into the computing discipline, the fact is that the challenge is as relevant today as it was in the 1980s. There is sufficient evidence to suggest that agreement is yet to be reached on exactly how to integrate successfully writing skills into traditional computing curricula, thereby familiarising computing students with an essential activity of their chosen profession. Furthermore, the reporting of successful experiences tends to focus on the application of a variety of teaching strategies, is predominantly based on the experiences of instructors and is dominated by a lack of quantifiable results. This apparent lack of sufficient empirical evidence prompted a rigorous investigation into the perceived benefits of the integration of writing skills activities into a traditional intermediary level programming course. The main aim of the study is to measure the perceived benefit of each of a number of academic writing interventions, facilitated to skill students appropriately in the art of writing for the computing discipline. Each intervention is designed to support particular principles of academic writing. The ultimate outcome of the study is a survey which allows student participants to measure the perceived benefit-impact of each intervention. The qualitative and quantitative findings of this study suggest that students perceive most of the commonly used academic writing activities as beneficial in the construction of a report. What is apparent, however, is that those activities that are most frequently used by instructors are not necessarily perceived by students as being the most useful activities.