Computer Science Symposia
Computer Science & Information Technology Symposium 2002
Evaluation Results
1. What is your primary role in education? Check all that
apply.
| 56 Teacher/Faculty |
2 Administrator |
7 Technical Coordinator |
| 39 High School K9-12 |
7 Higher Education |
9 Other: |
| 36 Teach Computer Science |
24 Teach IT/Applications |
4 Teach Both |
| Others: Tech Prep, All Areas, Instructional Tech
Support,
Consultant, Instructional Technologist |
2. What was the main reason(s) you attended this symposium? If more
than one
applies, indicate the first by (1), second as (2), etc.
| 42 Program content as professional development experience |
35 Relevance of topic to my role in education |
| 40 Looking for new ideas in regard to this topic |
20 Opportunity to network with colleagues |
| 9 Involved in a project that is addressing this topic |
4 Other: Java, Better than Leadership Symposium |
3. Did the program meet or exceed your expectations?
65 Yes:
"Very good presentations. Excellent choice of speakers.
"Some sessions were awful. Some were good enough to make the
day worth
my time."
"Everything was great - except McCannon. Actually he was good
but relevance
to CS & IT was weak."
"Interesting presenters here."
5 If not, why:
"Over my head."
"The topics were too vague and didn't provide enough content
to be
helpful in the classroom."
"Little really new or innovative, Too much old or know
knowledge."
"I didn't realize it would be geared only to computer
science. I thought
I would get some principles to use for my web mastering and some
copyright info to use with business and web mastering."
"Did not address enough the needs of the non-programming
teacher. Agenda
not specific enough to make decisions on breakouts."
4. Please rate the following aspects of this Symposium:
| |
Poor |
Fair |
Good |
Excellent |
| a. Program Content |
0 |
3 |
29 |
37 |
| b. Knowledge of Speakers |
0 |
0 |
22 |
48 |
| c. Effectiveness of Breakout Sessions |
0 |
6 |
23 |
37 |
| d. Level of Audience Participation |
0 |
4 |
38 |
26 |
| e. Value of Topic |
0 |
1 |
30 |
34 |
| f. Facilities |
0 |
1 |
17 |
48 |
5. Which topic/session did you like the best and why?
I/O in Java: 15
"Value to my classes."
"Most relevent to current teaching assignment."
"Very relevant to my needs."
"Tim Corica was good."
"Ideas I can use to teach."
"Speaker was fun, dynamic, and well prepared."
"Most useful."
"Immediately relevant."
"Paced well - informative - good use of time."
Media Literacy: 13
"Excellent presentation."
"Most relevant and useable in my classroom, also possible to
develop
course and class."
"Analytical - not just how to use."
"I can use this in my Video Technology course."
"Most interesting."
"Presentation style, organization, content. Has done the
presentation
before - practiced. Effective use of multimedia."
"I would not use this material in my classroom."
"I am offended by McCannon - he's hypocritical - using sex to
sell
his views."
Vision and Dynamics: 11
"Thought Chris and Doug's talk was excellent."
"I could relate to the speakers. They tell it just the way it
really
is."
"Relevant"
"It showed that all of us have the same problems."
"Great"
"Too much time spent talking about problems we know. Would
like to
hear solutions, brainstorming,
change to solve the problems."
"I enjoy just listening to Chris, She is excellent."
Preparing Students: 9
"It was well-prepared and very relevant and summarized a lot
of good,
hard-to-find information."
"Its the hook to get kids interested."
"I am asked by students a lot."
"Lots of employment statistics in the IT field.
"Very insulting when Janie Schwark mentioned that teachers
who teach
office, desktop, etc. are not IT people.
If this is the mindset, then I don't want any part of
it."
"I can use this info to convince students to take more
classes and
get more administrative support."
Ethics: 7
"I can use this model the first day of school."
"It was fun, interesting, interactive and gave us a chance to
talk
and share."
"Group involvement/interaction."
"A lot of useful information for the classroom - enjoyed the
role playing
and interaction.
Web Pages: 6
"Knowledge of presenter and excellent examples."
"I will be able to apply it"
"Addressed critical issues of web design that went beyond
traditional
topics. Very applicable for me."
"Ideas/explanations will help in class."
"This breakout session gave no info whatsoever."
Computer Harware: 5
"Loved the hands-on aspect."
"Solid content"
Robotics: 2
"I was able to put a few Legos together."
Fluency: 2
"Good information and background."
Curriculum Design: 2
"Applicable"
General:
"All"
"It was good! Thanks!."
"The food was very good!"
"All the deserts had nuts in them. I am allergic to
nuts!."
"I liked all of them and will look for the ones that I did
not attend
on the web."
"All were good."
"All excellent speakers and content material."
6. What topics would you like to see included in next year's
program?
| 5 |
Java (as a First Language, C++ to Java, more Java, case
study) |
| 3 |
Classroom Management (cheating, administration,
discipline) |
| 3 |
Hands-on robotics |
| 3 |
Curriculum design/development |
| 3 |
Design Principles for Web mastering |
| 2 |
Business Applications |
| 2 |
Collaborative project ideas |
| 2 |
CS and IT Standards |
| 2 |
Engaging minorities and women in CS |
| 2 |
Ethics |
| 2 |
More of the same |
| 2 |
On-line CS courses that work |
| 2 |
SQL |
| 1 |
Assessment |
| 1 |
Careers in IT |
| 1 |
Computer Security |
| 1 |
Digital graphics curriculum |
| 1 |
Funding Issues |
| 1 |
Getting administrators on board |
| 1 |
Integrating programming and other subjects |
| 1 |
Media Literacy |
| 1 |
More beginner stuff: |
| 1 |
Multimedia |
| 1 |
Programming Languages |
| 1 |
Programming contests: |
| 1 |
Programming topics and ideas |
| 1 |
XML |
"You are great at deciding!."
7. How did you learn about this Symposium?
| 33 Mailed Invitation |
21 E-mail Invitation |
4 List-Serv Announcement |
| 13 Colleague Referral |
7 Other: TCEA Flyer (3), NECC Brochure, Previous
Attendee
(2) |
8. Please list any other professional organizations of which you are
a member:
| ISTE: 13 |
TCEA:12 |
ACM: 7 |
| NEA: 4 |
ATPE: 3 |
IEEE: 3 |
| SIGCSE(ACM): 3 |
NCTM: 2 |
FACT: 2 |
AATSP, AAUP, AAUW, AFSA, ARRL, COSN, FACE, FAEDS,
ITEA,
KYEA, MASSCue, NBEA, NCTE
NETA, NHSTE, OEA, TBTSA, TIVA |
Composite Results:
Attendee Demographics: 70 Responses
| Attendees |
Educational Responsibility |
| 80% |
Teacher/Faculty |
| 55% |
High School K9-12 |
| 51% |
Teach Computer Science |
| 34% |
Teach IT/Applications |
| 12% |
Other |
| 10% |
Higher Education |
| 10% |
Technical Coordinator |
| 5% |
Teach both CS and IT |
| 2% |
Administrator |
Event Ratings: 70 Responses
| Did the program meet or exceed your
expectations? |
| Yes: |
65 |
93% |
| No: |
5 |
7% |
Aspect Ratings: 69 Responses
| Aspect |
Poor |
Fair |
Good |
Excellent |
Good-Excellent |
| Program Content |
0% |
4% |
42% |
53% |
95% |
| Speakers Knowledge |
0% |
0% |
31% |
69% |
100% |
| Breakout Sessions |
0% |
8% |
33% |
53% |
86% |
| Audience Particip. |
0% |
5% |
55% |
37% |
92% |
| Value of Topic |
0% |
1% |
43% |
49% |
92% |
| Facilities |
0% |
1% |
24% |
69% |
93% |
Session Ratings: 61 Responses
Note: Only 61 attendees indicated favourite sessions but many of
those mentioned
more than one session.
|
% of Attendees
|
Session |
| 24% |
I/O in Java |
| 21% |
Media Literacy |
| 18% |
Vision and Dynamics |
| 14% |
Preparing Students |
| 11% |
Ethics |
| 9% |
Web Pages |
| 8% |
Computer Hardware |
| 3% |
Curriculum Design |
| 3% |
Fluency |
| 3% |
Robotics |
Recommended Sessions for Next Year: 37 Responses
Note: Only 37 attendees indicated topics but many of those mentioned
more than
one.
| 13% |
Java (as a First Language, C++ to Java, more Java, case
study) |
| 8% |
Classroom Management (cheating, administration,
discipline) |
| 8% |
Hands-on robotics |
| 8% |
Curriculum design/development |
| 8% |
Design Principles for Web mastering |
| 5% |
Business Applications |
| 5% |
Collaborative project ideas |
| 5% |
CS and IT Standards |
| 5% |
Engaging minorities and women in CS |
| 5% |
Ethics |
| 5% |
More of the same |
| 5% |
On-line CS courses that work |
| 5% |
SQL |
| 2% |
Assessment |
| 2% |
Careers in IT |
| 2% |
Computer Security: |
| 2% |
Digital graphics curriculum |
| 2% |
Funding Issues |
| 2% |
Getting administrators on board |
| 2% |
Integrating programming and other subjects |
| 2% |
Media Literacy |
| 2% |
More beginner stuff: |
| 2% |
Multimedia |
| 2% |
Programming Languages |
| 2% |
Programming contests: |
| 2% |
Programming topics and ideas |
| 2% |
XML |
| Computer Science and Information Technology Symposium, 2002, evaluation results |
|