The basis for education in the last millennium was “reading, writing, and arithmetic;” now it is reading, writing, and computing. Learning to program is an essential part of the education of every student, not just in the sciences and engineering, but in the arts, social sciences, and humanities, as well. Beyond direct applications, it is the first step in understanding the nature of computer science’s undeniable impact on the modern world. This course covers the first half of our book Computer Science: An Interdisciplinary Approach (the second half is covered in our Coursera course Computer Science: Algorithms, Theory, and Machines). Our intent is to teach programming to those who need or want to learn it, in a scientific context.

Computer Science: Programming with a Purpose
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1,374 reviews
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10 assignments
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There are 10 modules in this course
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Princeton University

Vanderbilt University

Ball State University

Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology(KAIST)
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Felipe M.

Jennifer J.

Larry W.

Chaitanya A.
Learner reviews
- 5 stars
82.76%
- 4 stars
11.56%
- 3 stars
2.25%
- 2 stars
1.01%
- 1 star
2.40%
Showing 3 of 1374
Reviewed on Sep 21, 2019
I liked this course very much. Good materials and perfect lecturers. Good structured and well explained material and interesting exercises ranging from very beginner to challenging.
Reviewed on May 19, 2020
It did not just teach coding, but taught efficient coding and how to think about performance issues, and separation of program parts into objects
Reviewed on Dec 16, 2024
The 5th star is absent only because the course relies on custom libraries. Not that I'm against that (who am I to say Robert Sedgwick is wrong, right?), but it would have been good, no?




