Teacher Materials

Curriculum Access Support

Need Access? To gain access to the educator-only materials for CSAwesome, you must request access to the Google Group/Forum. Follow the steps below:

Having Trouble? Try switching accounts to ensure you are logged in using the account that is approved. You can also try using the direct link to the CSAwesome Drive (below).

Changing Emails: Some educators find that there are conflicts with using your school email. If you need to switch emails, you can email us at info@csawesome.org from your school account and provide us with a personal Gmail address.

Reducing Emails: This is an involved group of teachers who are passionate about teaching CSA and eager to help each other out. If you want to change the number of emails you receive, you can adjust your settings by visiting the forum web page and then clicking My Settings (person+gear icon in the upper right of the screen). If you leave the group, you will lose access to the materials, however, you can switch the settings so that you don't receive emails. 

Unit 1: Getting Started with Primitive Types

Programming Challenges:

In this unit, students complete programming challenges that build toward the Enduring Understandings of

The challenges include:

The programming challenges are opportunities for students to understand and debug existing code as well as code programs with expressions and various data types to help solve problems. Learning Objectives: MOD-1.A, VAR-1.A -VAR-1.C, and CON-1.A - CON-1.C.

Unit 2: Using Objects

Programming Challenges:

In this unit, students complete programming challenges that build toward the Enduring Understandings of

The challenges include:

The programming challenges are opportunities for students to understand and modify existing code and use variables and operators along with sequencing to create programs that accomplish intended tasks. Learning Objectives: MOD-1.B - MOD-1.H, VAR-1.D -VAR-1.F, and CON-1.D.

Unit 3: Boolean Expressions and if Statements

Programming Challenges:

In this unit, students complete programming challenges that build toward the Enduring Understandings of

The challenges include:

The programming challenges are opportunities for students to represent and use expressions with variables and operators along with selection (e.g. if/else control structures) to create programs that accomplish intended tasks. Learning Objectives: CON-1.E - CON.1.H and CON-2.A - CON-2.B.

Unit 4: Iteration (Loops)

Programming Challenges:

In this unit, students complete programming challenges that build toward the Enduring Understanding of

The challenges include:

The programming challenges are opportunities for students to represent and use iterative processes (i.e while loops, for loops, nested loops) to create programs that accomplish intended tasks. Learning Objectives: CON-2.C - CON.2.H.

Unit 5: Writing Cases

Programming Challenges:

In this unit, students complete programming challenges that build toward the Enduring Understandings of

The challenges include:

The programming challenges are opportunities for students to .... Learning Objectives: MOD-2.A - MOD-2.H, MOD-3.A, VAR-1.G -VAR-1.H, and IOC-1.A.

Unit 6: Arrays

Programming Challenges:

In this unit, students complete programming challenges that build toward the Enduring Understandings of

The challenges include:

The programming challenges are opportunities for students to understand how to create arrays objects to manage data. Students also learn and practice implementing standard algorithms such as traversing arrays with loops. Learning Objectives: VAR-2.A -VAR-2.C and CON-2.I.

Unit 7: ArrayList

Programming Challenges:

In this unit, students complete programming challenges that build toward the Enduring Understandings of

The challenges include:

The programming challenges are opportunities for students to understand when and how to use an arraylist when writing programs to solve tasks. Students also have the opportunity to discuss and discover the effects and consequences of computing programs. Learning Objectives: VAR-2.D -VAR-2.E,  CON-2.J - CON-2.M, and IOC-1.B.

Unit 8: 2D Arrays

Programming Challenges:

In this unit, students complete programming challenges that build toward the Enduring Understandings of

The challenges include:

The programming challenges are opportunities for students to understand when to use 2D arrays in programming as well as how to write programs that include 2D arrays. Learning Objectives: VAR-2.F -VAR-2.G and CON-2.J - CON-2.N.

Unit 9: Inheritance

Programming Challenges:

In this unit, students complete programming challenges that build toward the Enduring Understanding of

The challenges include:

The programming challenges are opportunities for students to learn about the use of inheritance in writing programs. Students not only build an understanding of what inheritance means, but how to use it when writing coding to solve problems. Learning Objectives: MOD-3.B. - MOD-3.E

Unit 10: Recursion

Programming Challenges:

In this unit, students complete programming challenges that build toward the Enduring Understanding of

The challenges include:

The programming challenges are opportunities for students to understand the concept of recursion and when using recursive programs might be useful. Learning Objectives: CON-2.O - CON-2.Q

Culturally Responsive Teaching Strategies

When developing lesson plans for CSAwesome a CRT playbook was used. The playbook contains suggested activities for use in a culturally responsive classroom.

CS Teaching Tips and Misconceptions

The lesson plans include tips for teaching CS as well as warn teachers and educators of any known misconceptions that students might have about a particular topic.

Supplemental Teacher Resources

You must be a member of Teaching CSAwesome google group to access many of these resources. You can also reach them in your Google Drive under Shared Drives on the left.

Link to Teacher Resources Folder.

Resources from other teachers:

AP Exam Information

Course and Exam Description

The official AP CS A Course and Exam Description booklet can always be found on AP Central for AP CS A. The direct link to download the AP CSA CED is here. You can purchase a hard-copy binder at www.collegeboard.org/ced.

AP Exam

The AP Computer Science A Exam assesses student understanding of the computational thinking practices and learning objectives outlined in the course framework. 

Additional details:

AP Audit

If you will be teaching the AP CS A course in your school during the next academic year, you must complete the AP Audit process. Completing the audit will give you access to the brand new materials that the College Board will release including Personal Progress Checks.

Notes:

Play this video to watch a walk-through of the AP Audit Process. 

Note: During the CSAwesome PD teachers will learn how to complete the AP Audit process and how to access AP resources including AP Classroom and secure practice exams. 

AP Resources

College Board Resources

AP Classroom

See page 4 of the Course and Exam Description (CED) for more details on AP Classroom

Students and teachers have access to the online AP Classroom platform and its resources (unit guides, personal progress checks, progress dashboard, and AP question bank) after the activation process. Activation is described on pg. 5 of the CED.

For teachers that are new to AP Classroom, the College Board has provided a series of tutorials that can be accessed once logged into https://myap.collegeboard.org/. The various tutorials that are provided help with everything from navigating AP Classroom to creating assessments.

Note: Because the personal progress checks are formative, the results of these assessments cannot be used to evaluate teacher effectiveness or assign letter grades to students, and any such misuses are groups for losing school authorization to offer AP courses.

College Board Professional Development

CSAwesome is one of several providers seeking endorsement from the College Board for the AP CS A course. The CSAwesome professional development is NOT a College Board sponsored AP workshop. College Board offers AP Summer Institutes and one-day workshops that support teaching and pedagogy. More information is available at AP Professional Development.

Online & Hybrid Teaching

On August 20, 2020, we had a webinar on Online/Hybrid Teaching (video recording and slides).  Here are some resources from this webinar:

Other Resources:

A collaboration between the National Math & Science Initiative (NMSI) and the National Center for CS Education has allowed lesson plans and supplementary materials to be developed for teachers to use when delivering the CSAwesome curriculum to their students. Thank you to our CSAwesome lesson plan developers: John Harrison, Theresa Horvath, Pauline Lake, Randle Moore, Darci Santella, Lora Santucci, Jeannie Turner, and Nita Waterman!