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Main Authors: Bilbao, Javier, Bravo, Eugenio, Garcia, Olatz, Rebollar, Carolina
Format: Preprint
Published: 2025
Subjects:
Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2502.10400
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author Bilbao, Javier
Bravo, Eugenio
Garcia, Olatz
Rebollar, Carolina
author_facet Bilbao, Javier
Bravo, Eugenio
Garcia, Olatz
Rebollar, Carolina
contents Technology is currently ubiquitous and is also part of the educational system at all levels. It started with communication technology systems, and later continued with digital competence. Nowadays, although these previous concepts are still in force and are useful for students and workers in general, a new concept has been born that can function as a cross-curricular competence called Computational Thinking. There is currently no consensus on the definition of computational thinking, nor on the classification of its skills, but there is a consensus that it refers to a set of skills necessary for the formulation and resolution of problems. The study of Computational Thinking has been very influential in recent years in research on teaching and learning processes, which has led educational institutions to begin to address these issues during training. In this paper, we try to introduce this new cross-curricular competence and expose a project of implementation of Computational Thinking in engineering careers through Calculus subject.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2502_10400
institution arXiv
publishDate 2025
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Introducing Computational Thinking in Calculus for Engineering
Bilbao, Javier
Bravo, Eugenio
Garcia, Olatz
Rebollar, Carolina
Computers and Society
Technology is currently ubiquitous and is also part of the educational system at all levels. It started with communication technology systems, and later continued with digital competence. Nowadays, although these previous concepts are still in force and are useful for students and workers in general, a new concept has been born that can function as a cross-curricular competence called Computational Thinking. There is currently no consensus on the definition of computational thinking, nor on the classification of its skills, but there is a consensus that it refers to a set of skills necessary for the formulation and resolution of problems. The study of Computational Thinking has been very influential in recent years in research on teaching and learning processes, which has led educational institutions to begin to address these issues during training. In this paper, we try to introduce this new cross-curricular competence and expose a project of implementation of Computational Thinking in engineering careers through Calculus subject.
title Introducing Computational Thinking in Calculus for Engineering
topic Computers and Society
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2502.10400