2006 |
13 | EE | Richard E. Pattis:
Can't sing, can't act, can dance a little: (on choosing the right dancing partners).
SIGCSE 2006: 1 |
2005 |
12 | EE | Nick Parlante,
David B. Levine,
Steven K. Andrianoff,
Aaron J. Gordon,
Alyce Brady,
Pamela A. Cutter,
Paul Kube,
Jefferson Ng,
Richard E. Pattis:
Nifty assignment.
SIGCSE 2005: 371-372 |
2002 |
11 | EE | Barbara Boucher Owens,
Richard E. Pattis,
Chris Stephenson,
Jack Rehder,
Dean Sanders:
JAVA IDEs: why and how we use what we do.
SIGCSE 2002: 213-214 |
1999 |
10 | EE | Nick Parlante,
Owen L. Astrachan,
Michael J. Clancy,
Richard E. Pattis,
Julie Zelenski,
Stuart Reges:
Nifty assignments panel.
SIGCSE 1999: 354-355 |
1997 |
9 | EE | Richard E. Pattis:
Teaching OOP in C++ using an artificial life framework.
SIGCSE 1997: 39-43 |
1994 |
8 | EE | Richard E. Pattis:
Teaching EBNF first in CS 1.
SIGCSE 1994: 300-303 |
7 | EE | John W. McCormick,
Fintan Culwin,
Nicholas J. DeLillo,
Michael B. Feldman,
Richard E. Pattis,
Walter J. Savitch:
Teaching Ada by the book: the pedagogy of Ada in CS1.
SIGCSE 1994: 385-386 |
1993 |
6 | EE | Richard E. Pattis:
The "procedures early" approach in CS 1: a heresy.
SIGCSE 1993: 122-126 |
5 | EE | Michael J. Clancy,
Richard E. Pattis,
Mark Stehlik:
Approaches to programming assignments in CS 1 and CS 2.
SIGCSE 1993: 308 |
1992 |
4 | EE | Michael B. Feldman,
Richard E. Pattis:
Teaching and Using Ada in CS1/CS2.
TRI-Ada Tutorials (1) 1992: 1-59 |
1990 |
3 | EE | Richard E. Pattis:
A philosophy and example of CS-1 programming projects.
SIGCSE 1990: 34-39 |
1988 |
2 | EE | Richard E. Pattis:
Textbook errors in binary searching.
SIGCSE 1988: 190-194 |
1987 |
1 | EE | Richard E. Pattis:
Abstraction in Pascal: data and control.
SIGCSE 1987: 44-57 |