Title
Experiences with tutored video instruction for introductory programming courses
Abstract
In this paper we describe our experiences of exporting our introductory programming courses to community colleges. We used Tutored Video Instruction (TVI) as the mode of instruction where recorded versions of our lectures were shown to groups of students with local instructors periodically stopping the lecture for questions and discussion. We have offered a total of 16 sections of TVI courses, 11 were of our first quarter programming course (CSE142), and 5 were of our second quarter programming course (CSE 143). The courses were offered at seven institutions. Approximately 180 students completed the courses.We identify factors which contributed positively and negatively to the use of TVI for introductory programming courses. The two most important changes to our TVI program based on these experiences will the use of studio produced lectures and the abandonment of centralized course administration.
Year
DOI
Venue
2001
10.1145/364447.364619
ACM Sigcse Bulletin
Keywords
Field
DocType
distance education
Computer science,Studio,Distance education,Multimedia
Conference
Volume
Issue
ISBN
33
1
1-58113-329-4
Citations 
PageRank 
References 
8
4.36
0
Authors
3
Name
Order
Citations
PageRank
Richard J. Anderson186993.43
Martin Dickey284.69
Hal Perkins384.36