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Facilitating computing education to graduate students in journalism and public relations from Dewey's lens: prototyping

Mageda A. Sharafeddin ( College of Arts and Sciences, Phoenicia University, Mazraat El Daoudiyeh, Lebanon)
Ahmad Samarji ( College of Arts and Sciences, Phoenicia University, Mazraat El Daoudiyeh, Lebanon)

Journal of Applied Research in Higher Education

ISSN: 2050-7003

Article publication date: 21 December 2022

Issue publication date: 22 November 2023

100

Abstract

Purpose

In a technological era driven by coding, programming and artificial intelligence (AI), there is more need than ever to develop computing skills and knowledge for non-specialist students. Nonetheless, the literature on computer science teaching methods of non-scientific majors is not as comprehensive as that of scientific ones.

Design/methodology/approach

Pedagogically, the authors designed and implemented prototyping from John Dewey's pragmatic epistemological lens. Using a mixed methods approach, the authors tested the effectiveness and efficiency of this approach within the same course over four semesters across four academic years.

Findings

As an epistemological pedagogic device, prototyping facilitated learning by doing and experimenting and stimulated graduate students' self-directed learning, engagement and their overall ownership of the learning and teaching process, changing their role from being merely passive recipients of “strange, awkward and unfamiliar” knowledge to active constructors of “relevant and exciting” content knowledge. Such a change was reflected in the significant progress students made, driven by their commitment, motivation and enthusiasm, irrespective of their prior knowledge and age (Generations X, Y and Z). Prototyping also served as an avenue for a “Deweyian Reflection”, where graduate students, after internalizing the acquired computing skills and knowledge, started transferring such skills and knowledge to their professions (journalism and public relations (PR)) and daily practices.

Research limitations/implications

Findings from this study will add to the literature review on this subject matter and will inform future case studies in computer science education for graduate students from non-scientific backgrounds.

Practical implications

This paper reveals that learning by doing/experimenting needs to be accompanied by in-depth reflection to enable students to transfer the acquired knowledge and skills to other settings and contexts beyond that of the lesson, task, or project in hand.

Originality/value

There is little research published on introductory programming courses offered to non-specialized students (i.e. students from non-scientific backgrounds). This study contributes to the body of research on how to effectively engage these students in programming courses informed by John Dewey's pragmatic lens/epistemological lens.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

Disclosure statement: The authors declare that there is no conflict of interest.

Research Ethics Clearance: This study was carried out in full compliance with the principles outlined in the Charter of Ethics of Scientific Research in Lebanon (CNRS). Research ethics approval was obtained prior to data collection and participants' informed consent was obtained prior to all structured and semi-structured interviews.

Citation

Sharafeddin, M.A. and Samarji, A. (2023), "Facilitating computing education to graduate students in journalism and public relations from Dewey's lens: prototyping", Journal of Applied Research in Higher Education, Vol. 15 No. 5, pp. 1544-1560. https://doi.org/10.1108/JARHE-04-2022-0125

Publisher

:

Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2022, Emerald Publishing Limited

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