Having Students See the Human Context of Their Work through Narrative

Andrew Chen
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Abstract

In teaching an introductory course whose content was part computer literacy and part digital logic, an innovative approach to getting students to be engaged with the material was attempted. All homework assignments were part of a large narrative story with a protagonist that has many adventures, and during his adventures, he must ask for help from his friend. The friend is, of course, the student doing the homework. This provides a context and targeted audience for the students' writing, makes the student feel like their work is part of a larger coherent whole, situates the specific skills necessary in doing the homework, and results in the students directing their dislike of the assignment at the protagonist of the story rather than at the instructor. In doing this, students develop writing skills (as they write answers to questions from the story's protagonist) which are different in nature than what they would in an assignment in which they were asked to "show your work"; these writing skills more closely approximate the communication skills that these technical students would need to communicate with a non-technical audience. Integrating the large narrative story within the context of popular culture references, previous and future assignments, and allowing for it to build up suspense and tension with regard to the coming assignments and topics provides a continuity of instructional flow which is advantageous to retaining students' interest. This integration also helps with the education of various other non-technical skills as students learn to see their work in the larger human context of what they are doing through the use of the continually running narrative which holds the course together. In this paper I will describe this approach in detail, provide examples of how this approach was used, and provide survey results from students regarding the effectiveness of the approach in accomplishing the aforementioned items.
让学生通过叙述看到他们作品的人文背景
在一门内容部分是计算机知识和部分是数字逻辑的入门课程的教学中,尝试了一种创新的方法来让学生参与到材料中来。所有的家庭作业都是一个大型叙事故事的一部分,主角经历了许多冒险,在冒险过程中,他必须向朋友寻求帮助。当然,这个朋友就是做作业的学生。这为学生的写作提供了一个背景和目标受众,使学生觉得他们的工作是一个更大的连贯整体的一部分,定位了做家庭作业所需的特定技能,并导致学生将他们不喜欢的作业指向故事的主角而不是老师。在这样做的过程中,学生们培养了写作技巧(当他们回答故事主角提出的问题时),这与他们在被要求“展示你的作品”的作业中的写作技巧在本质上是不同的;这些写作技巧更接近于这些技术学生与非技术观众交流所需的沟通技巧。在流行文化参考、过去和未来作业的背景下整合大型叙事故事,并允许它建立关于即将到来的作业和主题的悬念和紧张感,这提供了一个连续性的教学流程,有利于保持学生的兴趣。这种整合也有助于其他各种非技术技能的教育,因为学生学会在更大的人类背景下看待他们正在做的工作,通过使用持续运行的叙事将课程结合在一起。在本文中,我将详细描述这种方法,提供如何使用这种方法的例子,并提供学生关于完成上述项目的方法的有效性的调查结果。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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