perelgut@utcsrgv.UUCP (Stephen Perelgut) (02/28/84)
(..) \/ I am currently looking into the use of personal computers in formal teaching environments. I am particularly interested in how pc's can be used in introductory programming courses. It seems that every year more students enter university to take their first courses in computer science already owning a pc of some sort. Others will by pc's during the year (especially with the various special deals between some universities and some manufacturers.) 1) Are there any universities that already teach introductory courses based on pc's? How do they rationalize the fact that wealthier students will have an advantage since they can afford to purchase a machine whereas the others will have to share the machines purchased by the university? How many students per machine does the university count on? How many personally owned machines does the university expect? Are students expected to form consortiums to buy (or rent) a machine? 2) If courses are based on pc's, should the software take full advantage of a particular machines features or should the software be more general than that and run on a family of machines. The University of Toronto is recognizing that the percentage of students in the university who own personal computers is increasing every year. The Computer Systems Research Group is currently converting the Turing language to run on pc's (8086/8088/80186/80188 based, MS-DOS). Turing was recently adopted at the university as the sole language for department of computer science introductory programming courses. We are now interested in whether or not introductory courses should be taught on pc's. I am particularly interested in all comments from Dartmouth, Brown, MIT, and any other sites on the network that have already started converting to a personal computer format. What are you doing? Why are you doing it? Are there any formal studies leading up to the decision (I would appreciate copies mailed to me directly at: Stephen Perelgut Computer Systems Research Group University of Toronto 10 Kings College Rd Rm. SF2102A Toronto Ontario Canada M5S 1A4 Any and all comments will be gratefully received (mail would be preferred, either electronic or hard-copy). I will summarize at weekly intervals if volume warrants. Electronic addresses below. -- Stephen Perelgut Computer Systems Research Group University of Toronto Usenet: {linus, ihnp4, allegra, decvax, floyd}!utcsrgv!perelgut CSNET: perelgut@Toronto