Using C for the First Programming Course
Gary Fostel
fostel at cscadm.ncsu.edu
Sun Apr 9 17:48:13 AEST 1989
It is widely assumed by many CSC types, that Pascal is the only
proper and practical way to introduce programming. Furhter, it is
commonly asserted that C is a particularly bad choice of languages
for the first course. I am not interested in engaging in an open
ended and probably endless debate about the truth of these claims
nor do I assert that they are valid or invalid.
I am however, interested in hearing about university level courses
that use C for the "first programming course". This course should
be one that has substantial student programming involvement, and
for which there are no prerequisits, except possible previous
knowledge of typing, and really trival computer literacy. If you
have some experienve to relate, please provide a few details about
it, such as which text was used, which programming environment was
used, what sorts of students were involved, how large the classes
were and what pahse of the moon was dominant during the final exam.
If I get an useful number of responses I will summarize them.
This is a serious issue, as we are currently debating the feasibility
of moving away from Pascal in these early course here at NCSU, and
some real experience may either help us take the plunge or else
encourage us to remain conservative. This sounce rude, but I am
not anxious to field 10**5 responses about why it is or is not
a good idea; I am interested primarily in real, actual honest to
goodness teaching experience.
Send mail to: fostel at cscadm.ncsu.edu
Thanks
----gary----
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