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7th ACE 2005: Newcastle, NSW, Australia
- Alison Young, Denise Tolhurst:

Seventh Australasian Computing Education Conference (ACE 2005), Newcastle, NSW, Australia, January/February 2005. CRPIT 42, Australian Computer Society 2005, ISBN 1-920682-24-4 - Nicole Clark:

Evaluating Student Teams Developing Unique Industry Projects. 21-30 - Nicole Clark, Pamela Davies, Rebecca Skeers:

Self and Peer Assessment in Software Engineering Projects. 91-100 - Sally Clarke, Richard Thomas, Michael Adams:

Developing Case Studies to Enhance Student Learning. 101-108 - Tony Clear, Diana Kassabova:

Motivational Patterns in Virtual Team Collaboration. 51-58 - Quintin I. Cutts, Gregor E. Kennedy:

Connecting Learning Environments Using Electronic Voting Systems. 181-186 - Ursula Dantin:

Application of Personas in User Interface Design for Educational Software. 239-247 - Greg Dowling, Alan Tickle, Karen Stark, Jillian Rowe, Meredith Godat:

Greg Dowling, Alan Tickle, Karen Stark, Jillian Rowe, and Meredith Godat. 151-154 - Henry J. Gardner, Chris W. Johnson, Geoff Leach, Pascal Vuylsteker:

eScience curricula at two Australian universities. 211-216 - Sandy Garner, Patricia Haden, Anthony V. Robins:

My Program is Correct But it Doesn t Run: A Preliminary Investigation of Novice Programmers Problems. 173-180 - Cecil Goldstein, Susanna Leisten, Karen Stark, Alan Tickle:

Using a Network Simulation Tool to engage students in Active Learning enhances their understanding of complex data communications concepts. 223-228 - John Hamer, Kenneth T. K. Ma, Hugh H. F. Kwong:

A Method of Automatic Grade Calibration in Peer Assessment. 67-72 - Barry Harper:

Constructing High Quality Learning Settings. 3 - James M. Hogan, Glenn Smith, Richard N. Thomas:

Tight Spirals and Industry Clients: The Modern SE Education Experience. 217-222 - James M. Hogan, Richard N. Thomas:

Developing the Software Engineering Team. 203-210 - Heath A. James, Kenneth A. Hawick, Christie James:

Teaching students how to be Computer Scientists through student projects. 259-267 - C. W. Johnson, Ian Barnes:

Redesigning the Intermediate Course in Software Design. 249-258 - Geoffrey J. Kennedy:

Peer-assessment in Group Projects: Is It Worth It? 59-65 - Raymond Lister:

One Small Step Toward a Culture of Peer Review and Multi- Institutional Sharing of Educational Resources: A Multiple Choice Exam for First Semester Programming Students. 155-164 - Philip Machanick:

Peer Assessment for Action Learning of Data Structures and Algorithms. 73-82 - Alistair Moffat, Baden Hughes, Harald Søndergaard, Paul Gruba:

Making Connections: First Year Transition for Computer Science and Software Engineering Students. 229-238 - John Morris:

Algorithm Animation: Using algorithm code to drive an animation. 15-20 - Janet Rountree, Nathan Rountree, Anthony V. Robins, Robert Hannah:

Observations of Student Competency in a CS1 Course. 145-149 - Katherine Shaw, Julian R. Dermoudy:

Engendering an Empathy for Software Engineering. 135-144 - Simon:

Electronic Watermarks to Help Authenticate Soft-copy Exams. 7-13 - Richard C. Thomas, Amela Karahasanovic, Gregor E. Kennedy:

An Investigation into Keystroke Latency Metrics as an Indicator of Programming Performance. 127-134 - Nghi Truong, Paul Roe, Peter Bancroft:

Automated Feedback for "Fill in the Gap" Programming Exercises. 117-126 - Jodi Tutty, Barbara White, Robert Pascoe:

Experiences from a wireless-enabled tablet classroom. 165-172 - Peter Vamplew, Julian R. Dermoudy:

An Anti-Plagiarism Editor for Software Development Courses. 83-90 - Brian R. von Konsky, Jim Ivins, Mike Robey:

Using PSP to Evaluate Student Effort in Achieving Learning Outcomes in a Software Engineering Assignment. 193-201 - Ian Warren:

Teaching Patterns and Software Design. 39-49 - Marilyn A. Wells, Beverley D. Jones:

Commonsense ISD: An empirical approach to teaching systems analysis and design. 31-37 - Karyn Woodford, Peter Bancroft:

Multiple Choice Questions Not Considered Harmful. 109-116 - Tim Wright, James Noble, Stephen Marshall:

Tim Wright James Noble Stephen Marshall. 187-192

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