Skip to main content
Post Closed as "Needs more focus" by CommunityBot, Kilian Foth, amon, Giorgio
deleted 4 characters in body; edited tags
Source Link
yannis
  • 39.7k
  • 40
  • 185
  • 218

Sorry if this question is not appropriate for this stack exchange site, I've never used this one before.

I am doing my senior project on computer programming. I'm going to be presenting the project to classmates, teachers and (most importantly) judges, who haven't the slightest clue what programming is.

My question is somewhat broad, but how should I make my project to be about programming but still be simple enough for the judges to understand? Here are some things I considered:

  1. The project will focus on the history of programming, what it has accomplished, how it is used today, etc... and I will show pictures of code and say "This is what code looks like". So the presentation would be simple, easy, and average.

  2. Try to explain a little bit of code, perhaps show a loop in action or something like that, and try to make the audience think a bit rather than just watch someone present some stuff they consider to be boring. But then again, I don't want to make them feel stupid or anything.

Sorry if this question is not appropriate for this stack exchange site, I've never used this one before.

I am doing my senior project on computer programming. I'm going to be presenting the project to classmates, teachers and (most importantly) judges, who haven't the slightest clue what programming is.

My question is somewhat broad, but how should I make my project to be about programming but still be simple enough for the judges to understand? Here are some things I considered:

  1. The project will focus on the history of programming, what it has accomplished, how it is used today, etc... and I will show pictures of code and say "This is what code looks like". So the presentation would be simple, easy, and average.

  2. Try to explain a little bit of code, perhaps show a loop in action or something like that, and try to make the audience think a bit rather than just watch someone present some stuff they consider to be boring. But then again, I don't want to make them feel stupid or anything.

Sorry if this question is not appropriate for this stack exchange site, I've never used this one before.

I am doing my senior project on computer programming. I'm going to be presenting the project to classmates, teachers and (most importantly) judges, who haven't the slightest clue what programming is.

My question is somewhat broad, but how should I make my project to be about programming but still be simple enough for the judges to understand? Here are some things I considered:

  1. The project will focus on the history of programming, what it has accomplished, how it is used today, etc. and I will show pictures of code and say "This is what code looks like". So the presentation would be simple, easy, and average.

  2. Try to explain a little bit of code, perhaps show a loop in action or something like that, and try to make the audience think a bit rather than just watch someone present some stuff they consider to be boring. But then again, I don't want to make them feel stupid or anything.

edited title
Link
Rachel
  • 24k
  • 16
  • 95
  • 160

Senior project on programmnig, how How to explain thisthe history of programming to non-programmers?

added 5 characters in body
Source Link

Sorry if this question is not appropriate for this stack exchange site, I've never used this one before.

I am doing my senior project on computer programming. I'm going to be presenting the project to classmates, teachers and (most importantly) judges, who haven't the slightest clue what programming is.

My question is somewhat broad, but how should I make my project to be about programming but still be simple enough for the judges to understand? Here are some things I considered:

  1. The project will focus on the history of programming, what itsit has accomplished, how itsit is used today, etc... and I will show pictures of code and say "This is what code looks like". So the presentation would be simple, easy, and average.

  2. Try to explain a little bit of code, perhaps show a loop in action or something like that, and try to make the audience think a bit rather than just watch someone present some stuff they consider to be boring. But then again, I don't want to make them feel stupid or anything.

Sorry if this question is not appropriate for this stack exchange site, I've never used this one before.

I am doing my senior project on computer programming. I'm going to be presenting the project to classmates, teachers and (most importantly) judges, who haven't the slightest clue what programming is.

My question is somewhat broad, but how should I make my project to be about programming but still be simple enough for the judges to understand? Here are some things I considered:

  1. The project will focus on the history of programming, what its accomplished, how its used today, etc... and I will show pictures of code and say "This is what code looks like". So the presentation would be simple, easy, and average.

  2. Try to explain a little bit of code, perhaps show a loop in action or something like that, and try to make the audience think a bit rather than just watch someone present some stuff they consider to be boring. But then again, I don't want to make them feel stupid or anything.

Sorry if this question is not appropriate for this stack exchange site, I've never used this one before.

I am doing my senior project on computer programming. I'm going to be presenting the project to classmates, teachers and (most importantly) judges, who haven't the slightest clue what programming is.

My question is somewhat broad, but how should I make my project to be about programming but still be simple enough for the judges to understand? Here are some things I considered:

  1. The project will focus on the history of programming, what it has accomplished, how it is used today, etc... and I will show pictures of code and say "This is what code looks like". So the presentation would be simple, easy, and average.

  2. Try to explain a little bit of code, perhaps show a loop in action or something like that, and try to make the audience think a bit rather than just watch someone present some stuff they consider to be boring. But then again, I don't want to make them feel stupid or anything.

Source Link
Gabriel
  • 635
  • 5
  • 11
Loading