Communicating about computational thinking: understanding affordances of portfolios for assessing high school students' computational thinking and participation practices

Deborah Fields, Debora Lui, Yasmin Kafai, Gayithri Jayathirtha, Justice Walker, Mia Shaw

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingChapter

Abstract

Background and Context: While assessment of computational thinking concepts, practices, and perspectives is at the forefront of K-12 CS education, supporting student communication about computation has received relatively little attention.

Objective: To examine the usability of process-based portfolios for capturing students’ communication about their computational practices regarding the process of making electronic textile projects.

Method: We examined the portfolios of 248 high school students in 15 introductory CS classrooms from largely underserved communities, using a formal rubric (top-down) to code computational communication and an open-coding scheme (bottom-up) to identify computational practices described.

Findings: Students demonstrated stronger abilities to communicate about computation using text than visuals. They also reported under-assessed CT practices like debugging, iterating, and collaborating. Students of experienced e-textile teachers performed substantially better than those with novice e-textile teachers.

Implications: Portfolios provide a viable addition to traditional performance or survey assessments and meet a need to promote communication skills.
Original languageEnglish (US)
Title of host publicationAssessing Computational Thinking
Subtitle of host publicationAn Overview of the Field
EditorsDavid Weintrop, Daisy W Rutstein, Marie Bienkowski, Steven McGee
PublisherRoutledge
Pages112-146
ISBN (Electronic)9781003431152
ISBN (Print)9781032555300
DOIs
StatePublished - Sep 12 2023
Externally publishedYes

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