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Lessons Learned from a PLTL-CS Program Christian Murphy, University of Pennsylvania Rita Powell, National Center for Women & IT Adam Cannon, Columbia University Kristen Parton, Columbia University March 10, 2011

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Page 1: Lessons Learned from a PLTL-CS Program Christian Murphy, University of Pennsylvania Rita Powell, National Center for Women & IT Adam Cannon, Columbia University

Lessons Learned from a PLTL-CS Program

Christian Murphy, University of Pennsylvania

Rita Powell, National Center for Women & IT

Adam Cannon, Columbia University

Kristen Parton, Columbia University

March 10, 2011

Page 2: Lessons Learned from a PLTL-CS Program Christian Murphy, University of Pennsylvania Rita Powell, National Center for Women & IT Adam Cannon, Columbia University

Emerging Scholars Program (ESP) A Peer Led Team Learning Program (PLTL)

ESP concept – Uri Treisman at UC Berkeley (Math Workshop)

ESP/PLTL long applied in STEM disciplines

• 1 or 2 hour long weekly workshops adjunct to an academic course

• Workshops led by a undergraduate “peer leader”

• 6 to 15 student participants per workshop

• Students work together to solve problems without pressure of exams or grades

• Weekly meetings between peer leaders and program coordinators

• Coordinators evaluate program at end of semester to measure success, make adjustments

Page 3: Lessons Learned from a PLTL-CS Program Christian Murphy, University of Pennsylvania Rita Powell, National Center for Women & IT Adam Cannon, Columbia University

ESP-PLTL in Computer Science

• NSF funded eight-university study in 2004

• Developed, implemented and evaluated an ESP-PLTL program in CS1 over three years

• Published detailed findings, results, course modules

• Horowitz ( Wisconsin-Madison) and Rodger (Duke) SIGCSE paper in 2009

• Found that active recruiting combined with ESP-PLTL is an effective approach to attracting and retaining under-represented students in an intro CS class

• ESP-PLTL increased grades, retention in CS1

Page 4: Lessons Learned from a PLTL-CS Program Christian Murphy, University of Pennsylvania Rita Powell, National Center for Women & IT Adam Cannon, Columbia University

Columbia Emerging Scholars Program

Page 5: Lessons Learned from a PLTL-CS Program Christian Murphy, University of Pennsylvania Rita Powell, National Center for Women & IT Adam Cannon, Columbia University

Background: CS1 at Columbia Large, lecture-style class of about 150-200

students with no lab or recitation Required for many other Engineering majors

Most students have not yet declared a major Students are admitted to a School and declare in

their second year

Approximately 40% female enrollment Compared to less than 10% in the major in 2007

Page 6: Lessons Learned from a PLTL-CS Program Christian Murphy, University of Pennsylvania Rita Powell, National Center for Women & IT Adam Cannon, Columbia University

Columbia Emerging Scholars Program

Pilot program in Spring 2008 One section, six participants Adjunct to the CS 1 class Coordinated by 2 PhD students and CS1 instructor

Seed grant from NCWIT in summer 2008

Has continued to grow Currently two sections, 8-10 participants each Over 80 students have completed the program

Page 7: Lessons Learned from a PLTL-CS Program Christian Murphy, University of Pennsylvania Rita Powell, National Center for Women & IT Adam Cannon, Columbia University
Page 8: Lessons Learned from a PLTL-CS Program Christian Murphy, University of Pennsylvania Rita Powell, National Center for Women & IT Adam Cannon, Columbia University

Workshop Topics

Focus on collaborative problem solving and algorithmic thinking No programming whatsoever No homework or preparation

Topics from AI, graph theory, robotics, graphics, etc.

Most material created from scratch Some material from pltlcs.org website

Page 9: Lessons Learned from a PLTL-CS Program Christian Murphy, University of Pennsylvania Rita Powell, National Center for Women & IT Adam Cannon, Columbia University

1. “Mä hach’a challwawa challwataxa.”2. “Kimsa hach’a challwawa challwataxa.”3. “Mä challwa mä hach’a challwampiwa challwataxa.”4. “Mä hach’a challwa kimsa challwallampiwa challwataxa.”5. “Paya challwallawa challwataxa.”6. “Mä challwalla paya challwampiwa challwataxa.”7. “Kimsa challwa paya challwallampiwa challwataxa.”

Page 10: Lessons Learned from a PLTL-CS Program Christian Murphy, University of Pennsylvania Rita Powell, National Center for Women & IT Adam Cannon, Columbia University

Coed vs. Women-Only

Originally CESP was only for female students “How much do you like all-female workshops?”

46%: I prefer it that way 42%: it doesn't matter

Fall '09 and Spring '10: one all-female section and one coed section

Fully coed as of Fall 2010

Page 11: Lessons Learned from a PLTL-CS Program Christian Murphy, University of Pennsylvania Rita Powell, National Center for Women & IT Adam Cannon, Columbia University

Lessons Learned

Page 12: Lessons Learned from a PLTL-CS Program Christian Murphy, University of Pennsylvania Rita Powell, National Center for Women & IT Adam Cannon, Columbia University

Recruiting and Selection

Possibly the most important ingredient to a successful program

Know what you're looking for... and what you're willing to accept

In-class announcements from an undergrad work better than unsolicited emails

Institutionalization would help

Page 13: Lessons Learned from a PLTL-CS Program Christian Murphy, University of Pennsylvania Rita Powell, National Center for Women & IT Adam Cannon, Columbia University

Setting Expectations

Regardless of how you explain it, students may still not understand how a PLTL program works

Have former participants describe their experiences

“Open house workshop” for all applicants

Page 14: Lessons Learned from a PLTL-CS Program Christian Murphy, University of Pennsylvania Rita Powell, National Center for Women & IT Adam Cannon, Columbia University

Scheduling

Friday afternoons tend to be the best One section in early afternoon, one a bit later

Get a commitment from peer leaders

Be aware of conflicts with CS1 activities, religious holidays, Grace Hopper Conf., etc.

Page 15: Lessons Learned from a PLTL-CS Program Christian Murphy, University of Pennsylvania Rita Powell, National Center for Women & IT Adam Cannon, Columbia University

Training Peer Leaders Choose peer leaders from past participants

CESP uses a “workshop assistant” position to groom potential peer leaders

Training should be ongoing, even if the peer leader is already familiar with the material

Peer leaders should present material at staff meeting earlier in the week

Page 16: Lessons Learned from a PLTL-CS Program Christian Murphy, University of Pennsylvania Rita Powell, National Center for Women & IT Adam Cannon, Columbia University

Discussion vs. Problem Solving

Students tend to prefer activities that have clear “right” answers

Discussing the merits of different approaches/ algorithms not as appealing (but still important!)

Open-ended discussions about ethical/legal issues in computing have been lowest-rated

Page 17: Lessons Learned from a PLTL-CS Program Christian Murphy, University of Pennsylvania Rita Powell, National Center for Women & IT Adam Cannon, Columbia University

Evaluating the Program

Crucial to know the facts: How many students go on to CS2? How many major/minor in CS?

Be nice to administration and make sure they know you'll want this data

Stay in touch with past participants so they're not surprised when they hear from you

Page 18: Lessons Learned from a PLTL-CS Program Christian Murphy, University of Pennsylvania Rita Powell, National Center for Women & IT Adam Cannon, Columbia University

Initial Results

Page 19: Lessons Learned from a PLTL-CS Program Christian Murphy, University of Pennsylvania Rita Powell, National Center for Women & IT Adam Cannon, Columbia University

Women’s Representation in the Computer Science Major at Columbia 2005-2010

2005-06 2006-07 2007-08 2008-09 2009-100

5

10

15

20

25

% o

f wo

me

n C

S m

ajo

rs

Start of CESP

Page 20: Lessons Learned from a PLTL-CS Program Christian Murphy, University of Pennsylvania Rita Powell, National Center for Women & IT Adam Cannon, Columbia University

Other Results

45% of CESP participants who have declared a major have chosen Computer Science

Peer leaders are the ones who benefit the most Two have participated in CRA-W Distributed Research

Experience for Undergraduates One CRA Outstanding Undergraduate Research

honorable mention One currently working at Microsoft

Page 21: Lessons Learned from a PLTL-CS Program Christian Murphy, University of Pennsylvania Rita Powell, National Center for Women & IT Adam Cannon, Columbia University

Ongoing Evaluation

What is the quantitative impact of CESP on recruiting and retention? Number of students majoring in CS

Number of students who take CS2

What is the qualitative impact of CESP? Attitudes toward CS Effect of coed vs. all-female workshops

Page 22: Lessons Learned from a PLTL-CS Program Christian Murphy, University of Pennsylvania Rita Powell, National Center for Women & IT Adam Cannon, Columbia University

Links

National Center for Women & IT

http://www.ncwit.org

Columbia Emerging Scholars Program

http://www.cs.columbia.edu/esp

Peer-led Team Learning in CS

http://www.pltlcs.org

Page 23: Lessons Learned from a PLTL-CS Program Christian Murphy, University of Pennsylvania Rita Powell, National Center for Women & IT Adam Cannon, Columbia University

Revolutionizing the face of technology

Page 24: Lessons Learned from a PLTL-CS Program Christian Murphy, University of Pennsylvania Rita Powell, National Center for Women & IT Adam Cannon, Columbia University

                  

 To Join the K-12 Alliance, email [email protected]

The NCWIT Alliances