App creation in schools for different curricula subjects - lesson learned
Bernadette Spieler, Christian Schindler, Wolfgang Slany and, Olena Mashkina

TL;DR
This paper discusses the integration of a programming app called Pocket Code into school curricula across various subjects, highlighting lessons learned from a feasibility study involving teachers and students to enhance computational skills and engagement.
Contribution
It presents a structured approach for supporting teachers in using Pocket Code across diverse subjects, including lesson plans and templates, based on a feasibility study and qualitative insights.
Findings
Pocket Code can be effectively used in diverse school subjects.
Teachers with limited technical background can be supported to integrate programming.
Students showed increased engagement and empowerment through game creation.
Abstract
The next generation of jobs will be characterized by an increased demand for people with computational and problem solving skills. In Austria, computer science topics are underrepresented in school curricula hence teaching time for these topics is limited. From primary through secondary school, only a few opportunities exist for young students to explore programming. Furthermore, today's teachers are rarely trained in computer science, which impairs their potential to motivate students in these courses. Within the "No One Left Behind" (NOLB) project, teachers were supported to guide and assist their students in their learning processes by constructing ideas through game making. Thus, students created games that referred to different subject areas by using the programming tool Pocket Code, an app developed at Graz University of Technology (TU-Graz). This tool helps students to take…
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