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Teaching Public/Private Key Encryption to K-12 Students. Yvon Feaster CPSC 624. WHY K-12. Computer Science (CS) is a relatively new discipline G rowth of CS technology has greatly outpaced CS education in the United States (US) 10 th – 12 th grade students in SC = 138,910 [1]
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Teaching Public/Private Key Encryption to K-12 Students Yvon Feaster CPSC 624
WHY K-12 • Computer Science (CS) is a relatively new discipline • Growth of CS technology has greatly outpaced CS education in the United States (US) • 10th – 12th grade students in SC = 138,910 [1] • 209 students took AP exam for CS [2] • Undergraduate enrollment fluctuating [3]
Outreach Programs • Many universities offer CS outreach programs [4,5,6] • Videos available that demonstrate ways to teach CS concept • CS Unplugged [7] • Public/Private Key Encryption • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jJrICB_HvuI
Public/Private Key Pendleton High School Project[8]
References: [1] http://ed.sc.gov/data/student-counts/AverageDailyMembershipandAttendance.cfm [2] www.csta.acm.org/Research/sub/CSTAResearch.html [3] www.cra.org/govaffairs/blog/wp-content/uploads/2012/04/ CS_Degree_and_Enrollment_Trends_2010-11.pdf [4] www.cs.purdue.edu/outreach [5] cs.illinois.edu/outreach [6] www.eng.vt.edu/outreach/computerscience [7] www.csunplugged.org [8] Feaster, Y., Segars, L., Wahba, S.K., Hallstrom, J.O. , 2011, Teaching CS Unplugged in the high school (with limited success), In Proceedings of the 16th conference on Innovation and technology in computer science education (ITiCSE’ 11). ACM, http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/19997.1999817