


default search action
GDCSE 2008: Miami, FL, USA
- J. Kent Foster, John Nordlinger, R. Michael Young:

Proceedings of the 3rd International Conference on Game Development in Computer Science Education, GDCSE 2008, Miami, FL, USA, February 28 - March 3, 2008. ACM 2008, ISBN 978-1-60558-057-9 - Tiffany Barnes, Eve Powell, Amanda Chaffin, Heather Richter Lipford:

Game2Learn: improving the motivation of CS1 students. 1-5 - Jessica D. Bayliss, Kevin Bierre:

Game design and development students: who are they? 6-10 - Rafael Bidarra

, Jerke Boers, Jeroen Dobbe, Remco Huijser:
Bringing a pioneer games project to the next level. 11-15 - Hollie Boudreaux, Jim Etheredge, Timothy Roden:

Adding handheld game programming to a computer science curriculum. 16-20 - Charles Hardnett:

Gaming for middle school students: building virtual worlds. 21-25 - Alex Pang:

Group interactions in a game engine class. 26-30 - Yolanda A. Rankin, Amy Gooch, Bruce Gooch:

The impact of game design on students' interest in CS. 31-35 - Amber Settle, Joe Linhoff, André Berthiaume:

A hybrid approach to projects in gaming courses. 36-40 - Todd Shurn, Charles Hardnett, Iretta B. C. Kearse:

A game framework to enhance the STEM pipeline. 41-45 - Robert W. Sumner, Nils Thuerey

, Markus H. Gross:
The ETH game programming laboratory: a capstone for computer science and visual computing. 46-50 - Kelvin Sung, Rebecca Rosenberg, Michael Panitz, Ruth Anderson:

Assessing game-themed programming assignments for CS1/2 courses. 51-55 - Scott A. Wallace, Ingrid Russell, Zdravko Markov:

Integrating games and machine learning in the undergraduate computer science classroom. 56-60 - Jim Whitehead:

Introduction to game design in the large classroom. 61-65 - Dianna Xu, Douglas S. Blank, Deepak Kumar:

Games, robots, and robot games: complementary contexts for introductory computing education. 66-70 - Michael Zyda, Victor Lacour, Chris Swain:

Operating a computer science game degree program. 71-75

manage site settings
To protect your privacy, all features that rely on external API calls from your browser are turned off by default. You need to opt-in for them to become active. All settings here will be stored as cookies with your web browser. For more information see our F.A.Q.


Google
Google Scholar
Semantic Scholar
Internet Archive Scholar
CiteSeerX
ORCID














