Developing computational thinking in the classroom: a framework
Developing computational thinking in the classroom: a framework
Computational thinking sits at the heart of the new statutory programme of study for Computing: “A high quality computing education equips pupils to use computational thinking and creativity to understand and change the world” (Department for Education, 2013, p. 188). This document aims to support teachers to teach computational thinking. It describes a framework that helps explain what computational thinking is, describes pedagogic approaches for teaching it and gives ways to assess it. Pupil progression with the previous ICT curriculum was often demonstrated through ‘how’ (for example, a software usage skill) or ‘what’ the pupil produced (for example, a poster). This was partly due to the needs of the business world for office skills. Such use of precious curriculum time however has several weaknesses. Firstly, the country’s economy depends on technological innovation not just on use of technology. Secondly, the pace of technology and organisational change is fast in that the ICT skills learnt are out of date before a pupil leaves school. Thirdly, technology invades all aspects of our life and the typically taught office practice is only a small part of technology use today.
Curzon, Paul
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Dorling, Mark
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Ng, Thomas
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Selby, Cynthia
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Woollard, John
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June 2014
Curzon, Paul
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Dorling, Mark
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Ng, Thomas
67c257ab-9ba1-4133-ad27-270e1c3ff9e7
Selby, Cynthia
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Woollard, John
85f363e3-9708-4740-acf7-3fe0d1845001
Curzon, Paul, Dorling, Mark, Ng, Thomas, Selby, Cynthia and Woollard, John
(2014)
Developing computational thinking in the classroom: a framework
Swindon, GB.
Computing at School
15pp.
Record type:
Monograph
(Project Report)
Abstract
Computational thinking sits at the heart of the new statutory programme of study for Computing: “A high quality computing education equips pupils to use computational thinking and creativity to understand and change the world” (Department for Education, 2013, p. 188). This document aims to support teachers to teach computational thinking. It describes a framework that helps explain what computational thinking is, describes pedagogic approaches for teaching it and gives ways to assess it. Pupil progression with the previous ICT curriculum was often demonstrated through ‘how’ (for example, a software usage skill) or ‘what’ the pupil produced (for example, a poster). This was partly due to the needs of the business world for office skills. Such use of precious curriculum time however has several weaknesses. Firstly, the country’s economy depends on technological innovation not just on use of technology. Secondly, the pace of technology and organisational change is fast in that the ICT skills learnt are out of date before a pupil leaves school. Thirdly, technology invades all aspects of our life and the typically taught office practice is only a small part of technology use today.
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DevelopingComputationalThinkingInTheClassroomaFramework.pdf
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Available under License Other.
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Published date: June 2014
Organisations:
Southampton Education School
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 369594
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/369594
PURE UUID: 08c19ae8-58bd-4b4d-a6ef-b2915d5a48d6
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Date deposited: 07 Oct 2014 12:44
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 02:58
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Contributors
Author:
Paul Curzon
Author:
Mark Dorling
Author:
Thomas Ng
Author:
Cynthia Selby
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