Why Latino High School Students Select Computer Science as a Major: Analysis of a Success Story

This article reports on a public school that is succeeding in encouraging Latino high school students to select Computer Science (CS) as a major. The students attend a charter high school designed to encourage low-income Latino students to attend college and attain proficiency in English, Spanish, a...

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Veröffentlicht in:ACM transactions on computing education 2011-07, Vol.11 (2), p.1-17
Hauptverfasser: Zimmerman, Thomas G, Johnson, David, Wambsgans, Cynthia, Fuentes, Antonio
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container_end_page 17
container_issue 2
container_start_page 1
container_title ACM transactions on computing education
container_volume 11
creator Zimmerman, Thomas G
Johnson, David
Wambsgans, Cynthia
Fuentes, Antonio
description This article reports on a public school that is succeeding in encouraging Latino high school students to select Computer Science (CS) as a major. The students attend a charter high school designed to encourage low-income Latino students to attend college and attain proficiency in English, Spanish, and computers. Using data from surveys and by analyzing test scores, the authors quantify the characteristics of students who are likely to choose CS as a major. A survey of 139 tenth- through twelfth-grade Latino students is used to determine factors that influence CS major selection. The survey includes questions from a previous study (836 high school math students from 9 public and private schools) as a control. Additional questions measure student interest in 20 STEM, business, and humanities subjects. Standardized test scores are correlated with factors affecting choice of CS as a major. Environment and intervention programs in, after, and outside of school are examined to consider their impact on student development. The article provides a quantitative and qualitative analysis of the relationship among academic environment and performance, subject interests, gender, and teaching methods that influence the interest of Latino high school students in choosing CS as a major. (Contains 1 table and 6 figures.)
doi_str_mv 10.1145/1993069.1993074
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subjects Academic Achievement
After School Programs
California
Charter Schools
Computer Science
Computer Science Education
Constructivism (Learning)
Correlation
Educational Environment
English
Experiential Learning
Gender Differences
High School Students
High Schools
Hispanic American Students
Humanities
Intervention
Language Proficiency
Low Income Groups
Majors (Students)
Private Schools
Public Schools
Qualitative Research
Scores
Spanish
Standardized Tests
Statistical Analysis
STEM Education
Student Characteristics
Student Development
Student Interests
Student Surveys
Teaching Methods
title Why Latino High School Students Select Computer Science as a Major: Analysis of a Success Story
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