How (Not) to Write an Introductory Programming Exam

The computing education literature shows some recent interest in assessment in introductory programming, with papers analysing final examinations and other papers proposing small sets of examination questions that might be used in multiple institutions as part of a benchmarking exercise. This paper...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: SImon (Author), Sheard, J (Author), D'Souza, D (Contributor), Lopez, M (Author), Luxton-Reilly, A (Author), Putro, IH (Author), Robbins, P (Author), Teague, D (Author), Whalley, JL (Author)
Other Authors: Falkner, K (Contributor)
Format: Others
Published: Australian Computer Society, Inc., 2015-10-23T03:04:20Z.
Subjects:
Online Access:Get fulltext
Description
Summary:The computing education literature shows some recent interest in assessment in introductory programming, with papers analysing final examinations and other papers proposing small sets of examination questions that might be used in multiple institutions as part of a benchmarking exercise. This paper reports on a project that aimed to expand the set of questions that might be used in such benchmarking exercises, and at the same time to identify guidelines for writing good examination questions for introductory programming courses, and, by implication, practices to avoid when writing questions. The paper presents a set of ten questions deemed suitable for use in the exams of multiple courses, and invites readers to use the questions in their own exams. It also presents the guidelines that emerged from the study, in the hope that they will be helpful to computing educators writing exams for their own courses.
Item Description:In Proc. 17th Australasian Computing Education Conference (ACE 2015) Sydney, Australia. CRPIT, 160. D'Souza, D and Falkner, K. Eds., ACS. 137-146
978-1-921770-42-5
1445-1336