Inicio Nosotros Búsquedas
Buscar en nuestra Base de Datos:     
Autor: =Medina, Claudia
Sólo un registro cumplió la condición especificada en la base de información BIBCYT.
Publicación seriada
Referencias AnalíticasReferencias Analíticas
Autor: Gorriz, Cecilia M. cgorriz@future.sri.com
Oprima aquí para enviar un correo electrónico a esta dirección ; Medina, Claudia cmedina@us.oracle.com
Oprima aquí para enviar un correo electrónico a esta dirección
Título: Engaging girls with computers through software games
Páginas/Colación: pp. 42-49
Communications of the ACM Vol. 43, no. 1 January 2000
Información de existenciaInformación de existencia

Resumen
The article focuses on engaging girls with computers through software games

The article focuses on engaging girls with computers through software games. Recent report from the ACM Committee on Women in Computing (ACM-W) noted the alarming decrease of women graduating with computer science bachelor degrees. Indeed, the research showed a distressing 24% drop in women pursuing CS degrees over the last decade. Today, a growing concern is that girls are losing interest in computers. The reasons behind this fact are quite complex and are due to the contributions of many societal factors. In this article focus is on computer games because for most girls their first computer experiences are solely through playing software-based games. Creating software games of interest to girls has the potential to bring more girls into computing at early ages, thus increasing the numbers throughout the pipeline. In addition to this positive effect, the game market for girls has tremendous business potential. As the marketplace for computer-based entertainment changes, and as software developers design more content for girls, analysts expect females to spend more money on computers, games, online access, and other technology tools that have traditionally targeted male consumers.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

UCLA - Biblioteca de Ciencias y Tecnologia Felix Morales Bueno

Generados por el servidor 'bibcyt.ucla.edu.ve' (18.191.103.144)
Adaptive Server Anywhere (07.00.0000)
ODBC
Sesión="" Sesión anterior=""
ejecutando Back-end Alejandría BE 7.0.7b0 ** * *
18.191.103.144 (NTM) bajo el ambiente Apache/2.2.4 (Win32) PHP/5.2.2.
usando una conexión ODBC (RowCount) al manejador de bases de datos..
Versión de la base de información BIBCYT: 7.0.0 (con listas invertidas [2.0])

Cliente: 18.191.103.144
Salida con Javascript


** Back-end Alejandría BE 7.0.7b0 *