Computer Science and Engineering Secondary Education

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This community is for educators in computer science and engineering, focusing on post-secondary (university) education, from the perspective of educators. Adjacent fields and topics are welcome.

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cross-posted from: https://lemm.ee/post/5467810

In 1997, a contest began to develop a new encryption algorithm to become the Advanced Encryption Standard. After years of debate, one algorithm was chosen as the AES. But how does AES work? And what makes for a secure encryption algorithm?


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  • 0:00 The Contest
  • 1:02 Encryption
  • 3:57 Confusion and Diffusion
  • 5:44 Block Cipher
  • 6:55 KeyExpansion
  • 7:34 AddRoundKey
  • 8:14 Substitution Cipher
  • 8:55 SubBytes
  • 11:30 MixColumns
  • 12:53 ShiftRows
  • 13:21 The Algorithm

Aug 22, 2023

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This article discusses several cheating-deterrent methods (education, evaluation, clear expectations, etc.) and evaluates their combined effectiveness in reducing cheating in a CS1 course.

I use all of these methods in all of the courses I teach, and I find that rates of students cheating fluctuate significantly over time. In particular, I had managed to get violations (at least, identified violations) down to nearly nil for a few consecutive semesters, but this past semester they spiked significantly. Many students blamed ChatGPT, but it is my professional opinion that old-fashioned plagiarism was at least as well represented as ChatGPT even for students who blamed the usage of ChatGPT for their infractions.

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Education in Computer Science and Computer Engineering is difficult, and growing ever more difficult as the fields grow and expand. Numerous studies have shown that STEM (science, technology, engineering, and mathematics) students work harder and longer, often for poorer grades, than other disciplines. Within stem, CS/CE are some of the more difficult majors for many students.

As a professional educating students in one of these fields, what are your techniques? What are your pain points? How do you keep students engaged and motivated, and how do you measure their progress?

These questions are what this community is about. I don't have all of the answers, but I sure do have experiences, and I certainly have questions!

Join me in building a community of practice around best practices and experience-sharing for educators of CS and CE topics.