scholarly journals Guidelines for using empirical studies in software engineering education

2017 ◽  
Vol 3 ◽  
pp. e131 ◽  
Author(s):  
Fabian Fagerholm ◽  
Marco Kuhrmann ◽  
Jürgen Münch

Software engineering education is under constant pressure to provide students with industry-relevant knowledge and skills. Educators must address issues beyond exercises and theories that can be directly rehearsed in small settings. Industry training has similar requirements of relevance as companies seek to keep their workforce up to date with technological advances. Real-life software development often deals with large, software-intensive systems and is influenced by the complex effects of teamwork and distributed software development, which are hard to demonstrate in an educational environment. A way to experience such effects and to increase the relevance of software engineering education is to apply empirical studies in teaching. In this paper, we show how different types of empirical studies can be used for educational purposes in software engineering. We give examples illustrating how to utilize empirical studies, discuss challenges, and derive an initial guideline that supports teachers to include empirical studies in software engineering courses. Furthermore, we give examples that show how empirical studies contribute to high-quality learning outcomes, to student motivation, and to the awareness of the advantages of applying software engineering principles. Having awareness, experience, and understanding of the actions required, students are more likely to apply such principles under real-life constraints in their working life.

2015 ◽  
Vol 3 (2) ◽  
pp. 13-23
Author(s):  
Yuki Ito ◽  
Atsuo Hazeyama ◽  
Yasuhiko Morimoto ◽  
Hiroaki Kaminaga ◽  
Shoichi Nakamura ◽  
...  

In order to extend and maintenance software systems, it is necessary to remove factors behind bad smells from source code through refactoring. However, it is time-consuming process to detect and remove factors behind bad smells manually from large source code. And, learning how to refactor bad smells can be difficult for students because they are not yet software development experts. Therefore, the authors propose a method for detecting bad smells using declarative meta programming that can be applied to software development training. In this manner, software development training is facilitated.


Author(s):  
Alexey Khoroshilov ◽  
Victor Kuliamin ◽  
Alexander Petrenko ◽  
Olga Petrenko ◽  
Vladimir Rubanov

The chapter discusses principles of open education and possibilities of implementing these principles for software engineering education on the base of open source software development projects. A framework of practical courses for software engineering students built on these ideas is presented. Experience of building courses on the base of this framework is discussed on the example of “Software Engineering” course provided to students of the System Programming departments of the two Russian top-ranked universities, Moscow State University and Moscow Institute of Physics and Technology.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document