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Nov 24, 2017 at 3:47 history edited Peter Mortensen CC BY-SA 3.0
(While we are at it.)
May 24, 2014 at 15:17 history made wiki Post Made Community Wiki by animusonStaffMod
May 12, 2014 at 2:34 history migrated from meta.stackexchange.com (revisions)
Apr 19, 2012 at 14:08 comment added Hooked Sending my students to SO (and the sister sites) has been enormously fruitful for both them and me. "Lazy" students often don't know how to properly ask a question, students get plenty of nudges from the site and it's operators in the right direction. Rapidly they see how to ask and eventually answer questions on the site if they stay with it. There is a strong (and mostly successful) socialization for users that stick with the site and a good correlation with knowledge that they internalize from their interactions here.
May 20, 2009 at 1:30 comment added Curt Sampson There are two kinds of problems one encounters when programming: the ones where doing the basic research would get you the solution, and the ones where you've made some silly mistake to which you are personally blind. (I.e., my misspelling of one function name that produced extremely odd compiler error messages and took me ten minutes to debug). The latter is just pointless frustration for students, and anything that can get them out of that faster is a Good Thing. But how do we do that without letting them get lazy about the former?
Apr 2, 2009 at 20:25 comment added skiphoppy Actually, I think StackOverflow is a great place to fix those problems in people. If people are being plain lazy, the responses will be accordingly.
Mar 28, 2009 at 15:06 comment added Uri I don't think I characterized all undergrads as lazy. But the fact is that under an intensive course schedule, even many of the best students would cut corners. Especially if it is not their major. The really good students would know the answers or find it themselves anyway, without seeking help.
Mar 28, 2009 at 7:58 comment added X-Istence I think it is unfair to put all undergrad students into one group as lazy ... I am saying that as an undergrad in a Software Engineering major at Uni.
Dec 5, 2008 at 15:01 comment added Uri There's a very tool by Prof. Andrew Ko from the University of Washington called "The Whyline" that actually tries to help novice developers track those "why" sort of things; he did it for AWT but it's really nifty.
Dec 5, 2008 at 10:08 comment added Frans-Willem 'I have seen students ask "what would this print?" when they could just write the code and execute it.' In my opinion some students might ask "What would this print?", when actually they mean "WHY would this print that?". A useful question, just wrongly worded :/
Dec 5, 2008 at 4:16 history answered Uri CC BY-SA 2.5