Title
Analyzing the Learning Process in Online Educational Game Design: A Case Study
Abstract
Educational game design environments are used for teaching computational thinking and software engineering concepts to novices. In software engineering education, there has recently been calls for \"innovative methods for software teaching and training in online courses\" (http://2014.icse-conferences.org/seet). However, to date, learning these concepts is tied to a formal learning environment and the presence of a teacher. In line with the new educational opportunities provided by the Web such as massive open online courses (MOOCs) and e-learning 2.0 platforms, we have created an online educational game design environment with integrated learning resources including video tutorials, showcases, and communication tools. To understand the effect of online educational game design environments with integrated support for learning on novices' use of the system and their learning, we conducted a mixed-method study with nine participants. While the learning goals were achieved to a high degree, the analysis of participants' interaction with the system reveals interesting phenomena about user preferences, such as the fact that during the given computational thinking tasks, the participants preferred the synchronous communication channel to other forms of commonly provided learning resources such as forums.
Year
DOI
Venue
2014
10.1109/ASWEC.2014.34
Australian Software Engineering Conference
Keywords
DocType
ISSN
Internet,computer aided instruction,computer games,computer science education,software engineering,teaching,MOOCs,communication tools,computational thinking teaching,e-learning 2.0 platforms,formal learning environment,integrated learning resources,learning process analysis,massive open online courses,online course training,online educational game design environments,showcases,software engineering concepts,software engineering education,software teaching,synchronous communication channel,video tutorials,MOOC,computational thinking,computer science education,cyberlearning,educational game design,end-user programming,learning analytics
Conference
1530-0803
Citations 
PageRank 
References 
0
0.34
12
Authors
2
Name
Order
Citations
PageRank
Navid Ahmadi1245.32
Mehdi Jazayeri21280176.00