Take a look at our recent poster presented this September at UKICER 2023:
Latest publications
- Glenn Strong, Ben North, Sara Fiori, Brian Gillespie, and Nina Bresnihan. 2023. Pytch – Supporting Learners over the Bridge from Blocks to Text. In Proceedings of the 2023 Conference on United Kingdom & Ireland Computing Education Research (UKICER ’23). Association for Computing Machinery, New York, NY, USA, Article 15, 1.
- Glenn Strong and Ben North. 2021. Pytch — an environment for bridging block and text programming styles (Work in progress). In The 16th Workshop in Primary and Secondary Computing Education (WiPSCE ’21). Association for Computing Machinery, New York, NY, USA, Article 22, 1–4.
- Nina Bresnihan, Aibhín Bray, Lorraine Fisher, Glenn Strong, Richard Millwood, and Brendan Tangney. 2021. Parental Involvement in Computer Science Education and Computing Attitudes and Behaviours in the Home: Model and Scale Development. ACM Trans. Comput. Educ. 21, 3, Article 18 (September 2021), 24 pages.
- Abeer Alsheaibi, Meriel Huggard and Glenn Strong. 2020. Teaching within the CoderDojo Movement: An Exploration of Mentors’ Teaching Practices. IEEE Frontiers in Education Conference (FIE), Uppsala, Sweden, 2020, 1-5.
Pytch repositories
The various git repos making up Pytch are available on GitHub:
The preferred development method is to use the git ‘superproject’:
This repo has all the individual repos as git submodules. Explore Getting started with Pytch development for more information on how to get set up for development work on Pytch itself.