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Main Authors: Saha, Utsab, Egherman, Lola, Rahman, Ramiz, Khan, Mohd Toukir, Wang, Kevin, Menezes, Tyler
Format: Preprint
Published: 2026
Subjects:
Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2604.18925
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author Saha, Utsab
Egherman, Lola
Rahman, Ramiz
Khan, Mohd Toukir
Wang, Kevin
Menezes, Tyler
author_facet Saha, Utsab
Egherman, Lola
Rahman, Ramiz
Khan, Mohd Toukir
Wang, Kevin
Menezes, Tyler
contents Undergraduates in work-based learning experiences often produce meaningful contributions as viewed by their supervisors, yet report a negative perception of their contributions because they struggled during the process or produced only a few lines of code change. As a result, many omit these contributions from their resumes and job interviews, losing a meaningful signal of technical ability. This study examines how guided blog posts help CS students in work based learning experiences reflect on what they learned and contextualize their experiences. It also evaluates the depth of reflection produced. The study included twenty-five juniors and seniors studying CS at CTCs and other affordable local colleges. All participated in one cohort during Fall 2024. Each student was assigned a simple open source issue to solve from a popular open source project over the course of several weeks with the help of an industry mentor. While working on the project, students drafted a LinkedIn blog post using a five-section outline covering project mission, assigned issue, technical architecture, challenges faced, and submitted solution. We conducted a thematic analysis of the published posts and measured reflection depth using Mejia and Turns's Knowledge Gain instrument. Four themes emerged from the posts: identifying problem solving techniques, growth mindset, the challenges and benefits of collaborative development, and the impacts of their contribution on users. Additionally, students demonstrated deep reflection across all four Knowledge Gain constructs. Structured blog posts offer a low-cost addition to experiential CS learning such as capstones, micro-internships, internships, and apprenticeships. This study is descriptive; future work should compare outcomes against a control group.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2604_18925
institution arXiv
publishDate 2026
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Writing Blog Posts Helps Students Connect Experiential Learning to the Workplace
Saha, Utsab
Egherman, Lola
Rahman, Ramiz
Khan, Mohd Toukir
Wang, Kevin
Menezes, Tyler
Computers and Society
Undergraduates in work-based learning experiences often produce meaningful contributions as viewed by their supervisors, yet report a negative perception of their contributions because they struggled during the process or produced only a few lines of code change. As a result, many omit these contributions from their resumes and job interviews, losing a meaningful signal of technical ability. This study examines how guided blog posts help CS students in work based learning experiences reflect on what they learned and contextualize their experiences. It also evaluates the depth of reflection produced. The study included twenty-five juniors and seniors studying CS at CTCs and other affordable local colleges. All participated in one cohort during Fall 2024. Each student was assigned a simple open source issue to solve from a popular open source project over the course of several weeks with the help of an industry mentor. While working on the project, students drafted a LinkedIn blog post using a five-section outline covering project mission, assigned issue, technical architecture, challenges faced, and submitted solution. We conducted a thematic analysis of the published posts and measured reflection depth using Mejia and Turns's Knowledge Gain instrument. Four themes emerged from the posts: identifying problem solving techniques, growth mindset, the challenges and benefits of collaborative development, and the impacts of their contribution on users. Additionally, students demonstrated deep reflection across all four Knowledge Gain constructs. Structured blog posts offer a low-cost addition to experiential CS learning such as capstones, micro-internships, internships, and apprenticeships. This study is descriptive; future work should compare outcomes against a control group.
title Writing Blog Posts Helps Students Connect Experiential Learning to the Workplace
topic Computers and Society
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2604.18925