VeranstaltungsortB01.0.14Veranstalter Fakultät für Technische WissenschaftenBeschreibungIn parallel with the rapid growth of digital technology and its pervasiveness in everyday life, it emerged the need to introduce knowledge of computer science at school, from the early years of the scholastic curriculum. This is not intended to promote programming careers among students, nor because they shall work in areas related to Information Technology, but because already in the present times, and more in the future, aware citizens must have digital skills and competences in order to be fully integrated into our society.In the last decade Computational Thinking has gained attention as a way for schools to develop those skills required by the current digital age. Algorithmic thinking is at the core of Computational Thinking and tangible interactive solutions can help children develop algorithmic thinking skills.This talk focusses on exploratory research concerning tangibles for graphs and graph algorithmic thinking (GAT) for learners aged from 9 to 15 years. The purpose of this research is to promote Algorithmic Thinking at school, by means of multi-sensory physical activities and learning-by-doing. Specifically, the research uses inter-connected interactive tangible objects. Manipulating tangibles fosters interplay between abstraction and concreteness, so as to enable learners to learn through visual and tactile experiences.By following an action research process, interactive objects for GAT evolved through prototyping and actions-studies. The talk overviews their evolution and delves into its most recent action: an ecological study with learners using tangibles for GAT. It ends by reflecting on results and future work.Vortragende(r)Andrea BonaniKontaktKerstin Smounig (Kerstin.Smounig@aau.at)