Redesigning the Intermediate Course in Software Design

C. W. Johnson*, Ian Barnes

*Corresponding author for this work

    Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingConference contributionpeer-review

    Abstract

    Learning to design software ahead of directly constructing it is a significant hurdle in a Software Engineering education. Our University has run a course in software design for second-year undergraduate students since 1994. We describe the evaluation and improvement of the course as it evolved from 2000 to 2003, from a focus on reverse engineering to forward design, to add design patterns and associated programming tasks, then has redefined its objectives and re-aligned the assessment tasks with them. We evaluated the course in four ways: by the distribution of final grades, subjective evidence on the quality of answers in the final examination, student satisfaction surveys, and comparison of students' final grades with other computing courses taken at the same time. The attempt to improve the course by introducing homework tasks on design patterns did not improve the outcomes. But re-aligning the assessment with the objectives, and introducing a component on requirements specification, improved on most measures.

    Original languageEnglish
    Title of host publicationComputing Education 2005 - Seventh Australasian Computing Education Conference, ACE 2005
    Pages249-258
    Number of pages10
    Publication statusPublished - Jan 2005

    Publication series

    NameConferences in Research and Practice in Information Technology Series
    Volume42
    ISSN (Print)1445-1336

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