评估自闭症谱系障碍学生无障碍计算机课程的有效性

Abdu Arslanyilmaz, Margie Briley, Gregory Boerio, Katie Petridis, Ramlah Ilyas
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摘要

专门针对自闭症谱系障碍(ASD)学生设计和开发计算课程的研究数量有限,迄今为止,还没有研究考察过专门针对自闭症谱系障碍学生设计的无障碍计算课程的有效性。本研究的目标是评估无障碍课程在提高计算思维概念(CTCs)(如序列、循环、并行、条件、运算符和数据)的学习效果,以及计算思维实践(CTPs)(包括实验和迭代、测试和调试、重用和重混合、抽象和模块化)的熟练程度方面的发展效果。这项研究涉及两个小组,每个小组由 24 名学生组成。其中一组使用无障碍课程进行教学,另一组使用原始课程进行教学。对学生 CTC 的评估包括分析两组学生的前测和后测分数,并通过基于人工制品的访谈分数评估他们的 CTP。结果表明,两组学生在 CTC 学习方面都有所提高,两种课程之间没有显著差异。不过,无障碍计算课程在学生的调试和测试、迭代和实验、模块化和抽象化以及混搭和重用方面的熟练程度有了显著提高。研究结果表明,无障碍计算课程对患有自闭症的学生非常有效。
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Assessing the Efficacy of an Accessible Computing Curriculum for Students with Autism Spectrum Disorders
There is a limited amount of research dedicated to designing and developing computing curricula specifically tailored for students with autism spectrum disorder (ASD), and thus far, no study has examined the effectiveness of an accessible computing curriculum designed specifically for students with ASD. The goal of this study is to evaluate the effectiveness of an accessible curriculum in improving the learning of computational thinking concepts (CTCs) such as sequences, loops, parallelism, conditionals, operators, and data, as well as the development of proficiency in computational thinking practices (CTPs) including experimenting and iterating, testing and debugging, reusing and remixing, and abstracting and modularizing. The study involved two groups, each comprising twenty-four students. One group received instruction using the accessible curriculum, while the other was taught with the original curriculum. Evaluation of students’ CTCs included the analysis of pretest and posttest scores for both groups, and their CTPs were assessed through artifact-based interview scores. The results indicated improvement in both groups concerning the learning of CTCs, with no significant difference between the two curricula. However, the accessible computing curriculum demonstrated significant enhancements in students’ proficiency in debugging and testing, iterating and experimenting, modularizing and abstracting, as well as remixing and reusing. The findings suggest the effectiveness of accessible computing curricula for students with ASD.
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