"I Can't Read, But I Can Code": Using Puppets to Teach C++ to Pre-readers: A Quasi-experimental Critical Phenomenological Mixed Methods Case Study [April Fools]

"I Can't Read, But I Can Code": Using Puppets to Teach C++ to Pre-readers [April Fools]
Jared O'Leary

[This episode was a friendly April Fools prank about a fake paper I created] In this bonus episode I unpack Rollerstein’s (2021) publication titled “‘I can't read, but I can code’: Using puppets to teach C++ to pre-readers: A quasi-experimental critical phenomenological mixed methods case study” which investigated the use of puppets to teach C++ to pre-readers in pre-K CS classes.


Abstract

“In the United States there are hundreds of thousands of open computing jobs that are currently unfilled. Although the K-12 pipeline can prepare students for future careers in computer science, the approaches used in elementary classes in particular are often decontextualized from industry practices; for example, elementary students often use block-based programming languages, while industry professionals tend to use text-based languages. Given that the Fair Labor Standards Act sets the minimum age for employment in non-agricultural jobs at 14 years of age, this presents an opportunity for students ages 14 and older to fill current CS positions if they are adequately prepared in CS. To better prepare students for a jump start to such opportunities, this quasi-experimental critical phenomenological mixed methods case study investigated the use of puppets to teach C++ to pre-readers in pre-Kinder classes over the course of a semester. Statistically significant results (p < 0.01) from this study indicate that pre-K students who listened to a lecture pantomimed by a puppet were able to out perform their peers who listened to the same lecture by a university professor. The results from this study demonstrate a promising approach for accelerating the CS industry pipeline in K-12 contexts.”


Author Keywords

C++, industry pipeline, pre-reader, April Fools


My One Sentence Summary

This paper investigated the use of puppets to teach C++ to pre-readers in pre-K CS classes.


Some Of My Lingering Questions/Thoughts

  • How might the results have differed if the puppets were singing the lines of code in a musical rather than speaking the lines of code?

  • What's a similar approach we might be able to use with older students?




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