Code Collaborate: Dissecting Team Dynamics in First-Semester Programming Students

October 28, 2024 · 🏛 International Conference on Information Technology Based Higher Education and Training

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Authors Santiago Berrezueta-Guzman, Patrick Bassner, Stefan Wagner, Stephan Krusche arXiv ID 2410.20939 Category cs.SE: Software Engineering Citations 3 Venue International Conference on Information Technology Based Higher Education and Training Repository https://huggingface.co/galqiwi/higgs-kernels Last Checked 1 hour ago
Abstract
Understanding collaboration patterns in introductory programming courses is essential, as teamwork is a critical skill in computer science. In professional environments, software development relies on effective teamwork, navigating diverse perspectives, and contributing to shared goals. This paper offers a comprehensive analysis of the factors influencing team efficiency and project success, providing actionable insights to enhance the effectiveness of collaborative programming education. By analyzing version control data, survey responses, and performance metrics, the study highlights the collaboration trends that emerge as first-semester students develop a 2D game project. Results indicate that students often slightly overestimate their contributions, with more engaged individuals more likely to acknowledge mistakes. Team performance shows no significant variation based on nationality or gender composition, though teams that disbanded frequently consisted of lone wolves, highlighting collaboration challenges and the need for strengthened teamwork skills. Presentations closely reflected individual project contributions, with active students excelling in evaluative questioning and performing better on the final exam. Additionally, the complete absence of plagiarism underscores the effectiveness of proactive academic integrity measures, reinforcing honest collaboration in educational settings.
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