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Alexander Repenning

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Name
  
Alexander Repenning


Known for
  
AgentSheets

Alexander Repenning httpswwwcscoloradoeduralexalexjpg

Citizenship
  
United States, Switzerland

Fields
  
Computer Science, Cognitive Science

Institutions
  
University of Colorado at Boulder

Alma mater
  
University of Colorado Boulder

Institution
  
University of Colorado Boulder

Computational Thinking und Programmieren


Work

Alexander Repenning httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Dr. Alexander Repenning is the Director of the Scalable Game Design project, a computer science professor, a founder of AgentSheets Inc., and a member of the Center for Lifelong Learning and Design at the University of Colorado in Boulder. Repenning is the inventor of drag and drop blocks programming. His research interests include computer science education, end-user programmable agents, human-computer interaction, and artificial intelligence. Repenning teaches educational game design in the USA, Asia and Europe. He has worked in research and development at Asea Brown Boveri Research, Xerox PARC, Apple Computer, and Hewlett Packard.

Contents

Contributions

Repenning is the creator of the AgentSheets and AgentCubes Cyberlearning tools used for game design and computational science applications. As the Director of the Scalable Game Design project, using AgentSheets, he leads an effort to reinvent computer science education in public schools through game design starting at the middle school level. With over 10,000 students, and with funding from the National Science Foundation (ITEST and CE21 programs) and Google, the Scalable Game Design project is conducting the largest US study of computer science education at the middle school level including inner city schools, remote rural areas, and Native American communities. Results indicate that students, across genders and ethnicities, are not only highly motivated to learn computer science through game design but they also learn essential computational thinking skills. They acquire skills through game design, which later they can leverage in STEM simulation creation. Repenning's theoretical contributions include a pedagogical framework called the Zones of Proximal Flow combining Vygotsky’s Zone of Proximal Development with Csikszentmihalyi’s state of Flow.

Recognition

The AgentSheets work has received numerous awards including the Gold Medal from the mayor of Paris for “most innovative application in education of the World Wide Web” at WWW5, and an invitation by the Association for Computing Machinery to showcase AgentSheets as one of the “best of the best innovators” at the ACM1 Conference. Repenning has been a Telluride Tech Festival honoree for contributions to computer science education. Previous honorees include Vint Cerf, recognized as one of the fathers of the Internet, and Alan Kay, recognized as one of the pioneers of object-oriented programming. Repenning has served as advisor to the National Academy of Sciences, the European Commission, The Japanese Ministry of Education, the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD), the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy (OSTP) and the National Science Foundation. He is a reviewer for research funding organizations in the USA, Canada, Europe and Asia. He has chaired conferences on end-user programming for kids and has been invited to give talks, guest lectures, workshops, and keynote addresses nationally including at Stanford, the MIT Media Lab, and University of Colorado and at numerous international conferences. Beyond academic recognition, Repenning's work has also been featured in TV News, radio, newspapers and in popular press including WIRED Magazine. In Switzerland, Repenning was selected to be one of the 100 Digital Shapers.

References

Alexander Repenning Wikipedia