Gender differences in computational thinking skills among Malaysian’s primary school students using visual programming

Computational Thinking (CT) is a thought process which utilize computer science concepts to solve problem in the real life. One of the methods to develop CT among the Children is by using visual programming to create computational artifacts such as animation and games. This study collected 50 animat...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Osmanullrazi, Abdullah, Adzhar, Kamaludin, Nur Shamsiah, Abdul Rahman
Format: Conference or Workshop Item
Language:English
English
Published: IEEE 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:http://umpir.ump.edu.my/id/eprint/33708/1/Gender%20differences%20in%20computational%20thinking%20skills%20among%20Malaysian%E2%80%99s%20.pdf
http://umpir.ump.edu.my/id/eprint/33708/2/Gender%20differences%20in%20computational%20thinking.pdf
Description
Summary:Computational Thinking (CT) is a thought process which utilize computer science concepts to solve problem in the real life. One of the methods to develop CT among the Children is by using visual programming to create computational artifacts such as animation and games. This study collected 50 animation and 47 games projects created by the primary school students in standard 6 (12-year-old) from the eight-week lesson using visual programming Scratch. The purpose of the study is to investigate if there is a significant difference between male and female students on CT skills of flow control, logic, data representation, parallelism, synchronization, user interactivity and abstraction. Source code projects were analyzed for CT skills score. Result from Mann-Whitney U test shows the different was not statistically significant between male and female students on CT skills mentioned previously.