Understanding California's computer science transfer pathways

Resource type
Authors/contributors
Title
Understanding California's computer science transfer pathways
Abstract
This paper presents the first curricular landscape analysis of transfer pathways for computer science (CS) transfer students in the public higher education system in California, the largest and most complex higher education system in the United States. Drawing on data from 115 community colleges and 31 public universities in California, this study examines and compares computer science Bachelor's degree requirements, curriculum complexities, and both ideal and existing course articulation coverage between schools. We find considerable variation in the CS degree requirements across the system, particularly in the number of math courses required and the overall flexibility of the course requirements. Articulation agreements between community colleges and four-year schools have the potential to (and sometimes do) reduce the complexity of the degree for transfer students significantly, but articulation agreements are not consistently in place across the system. This research both suggests concrete action items and surfaces important areas of further exploration to create a more seamless process for transfer students to complete their CS Bachelor's degrees.
Proceedings Title
Proceedings of the 55th ACM Technical Symposium on Computer Science Education V. 1
Publisher
Association for Computing Machinery
Place
New York, NY, USA
Date
March 7, 2024
Pages
604–610
Series
SIGCSE 2024
ISBN
979-8-4007-0423-9
Citation Key
jiangUnderstandingCaliforniaComputer2024
Accessed
2024-04-11
Library Catalog
ACM Digital Library
Citation
Jiang, J., Kafle, R., Lehr, C., Wright, S., Guitierrez-Godoy, C., & Alvarado, C. (2024). Understanding California’s computer science transfer pathways. Proceedings of the 55th ACM Technical Symposium on Computer Science Education V. 1, SIGCSE 2024, 604–610. https://doi.org/10.1145/3626252.3630956