Blogs (19) >>
Fri 17 Mar 2023 15:45 - 16:10 at 714 - Providing Help to Students Chair(s): Deepti Joshi

Web-based help-seeking – finding and utilizing websites to solve a problem – is a critical skill during programming, in both professional and academic settings. However, little work has explored how students, especially novices, engage in web-based help-seeking during programming, or what strategies they use and barriers they face. This study begins to investigate these questions through analysis of students’ web-search behaviors during programming. We collected think-aloud, screen recording, and log data as students completed a challenging programming task. Students were encouraged to use the web for help when needed, as if in an internship. We then qualitatively analyzed the data to address three research questions: 1) What events motivate students to use web search? 2) What strategies do students employ to search for, select, and learn from web pages? 3) What barriers do students face in web search, and when do they arise? Our results suggest that that novices use a variety of web-search strategies – some quite unexpected – with varying degrees of success, suggesting that web search can be a challenging skill for novice programmers. We discuss how these results inform future research and pedagogy focused on how to support students in effective web search.

Fri 17 Mar

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15:45 - 17:00
Providing Help to StudentsPapers at 714
Chair(s): Deepti Joshi Citadel
15:45
25m
Paper
Analysis of Novices’ Web-Based Help-Seeking Behavior While ProgrammingIn-Person
Papers
James Skripchuk North Carolina State University, Neil Bennett North Carolina State University, Jeffrey Zheng University of Pittsburgh, Eric Li North Carolina State University, Thomas Price North Carolina State University
DOI
16:10
25m
Paper
Using Near-Peer Interviews to Support English Language LearnersIn-PersonGlobal
Papers
Oluwakemi Ola University of British Columbia
DOI
16:35
25m
Paper
What Drives Students to Office Hours: Individual Differences and SimilaritiesIn-Person
Papers
Shao-Heng Ko Duke University, Kristin Stephens-Martinez Duke University
DOI