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CPSC 203 ITBL Project. Fall 2005-Fall 2006 Working with Haskayne School of Business. Enhance and redesign. Goals provide a course that is relevant to the programs allow flexibility for students to take advantage of previous experience to choose assignment topics. Our Ideas .
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CPSC 203 ITBL Project Fall 2005-Fall 2006 Working with Haskayne School of Business
Enhance and redesign • Goals • provide a course that is relevant to the programs • allow flexibility for students • to take advantage of previous experience • to choose assignment topics
Our Ideas • Get information from • programs • instructors • students • Try online tutorials for flexibility
203 Instructors • Want to know • what do the programs want? • why do students take the course? • what are their expectations? • what resources are available to help us teach and assess software skills?
Who takes 203? • enrolment data from OIA for 2003-2005 • Interviews with program unit representatives
Haskayne Enrolment Required course and prerequisite for MGIS 317 and MGST 391
Communication and Culture Enrolment Most programs in the faculty require a “demonstration of computer competence”. CPSC 203 satisfies that. Many (30-40%) of the students are waiting to get into high-demand programs like management and biology.
Management Requirements • Graduates need computer literacy • Prerequisite skills in Excel and Access • MGIS 317 – do large Access project • MGST 391 Research and Analysis for Decision Making • Most important topics: software, Internet, information literacy, security • Some group work
C&C Requirements • Graduates need • Computer literacy • To understand how computers are used • Long-term retention of concepts • Less concerned about skills • Most important concepts: Internet, information literacy, computer program development • Most important skills: Blackboard, web search, Word
Survey of Current Students • some data • 80% agreed: “this course is valuable” • preference for talking about concepts to reading about • preference for instruction rather than learning on own • prefer practical projects
Survey of Past Students • Ranked most important topics • software and operating systems • Internet • networking and communications • Least important • hardware • computer program development
Past students • want • a very practical course
Pilot of Online lessons • for Microsoft PowerPoint tutorials and assignment used online lessons and performance-based assessment • two systems used
Student Experience • The majority of students agreed that • The online lessons explained new concepts well. • The online lessons allowed me to tailor my learning to my prior knowledge. • Overall, I prefer the online lessons to the workbook. • Assessment in this course should combine short online quizzes to test fundamental software skills with larger integrative assignments to test application.
Student Experience • The majority of students disagreed with the statement • Assessment in this course should only use larger integrative assignments.
Instructors Discussed Data • Agreed to use Blackboard • Try to make course topics and delivery more student friendly
Lecture Hours • Use the lecture hours less for lecturing and more for student centered activities. • We would like students to read material before lecture and discuss during lecture time. • We will spend more time discussing case studies and facilitating student projects and assignments.
Tutorial Hours • Want to use online lessons and assessment to teach the basic Microsoft Office skills. • Will use 50% of the tutorial time to facilitate the online lessons • remaining 50% of the time to work on case studies and assignments.
Fall 2006 • A textbook more compatible with the core topics has been chosen • Online lessons and assessment will be used to teach Microsoft Office skills • Assignments are designed around a case study