On Formal Methods Thinking in Computer Science Education

Author:

Dongol Brijesh1ORCID,Dubois Catherine2ORCID,Hallerstede Stefan3ORCID,Hehner Eric4ORCID,Morgan Carroll5ORCID,Müller Peter6ORCID,Ribeiro Leila7ORCID,Silva Alexandra8ORCID,Smith Graeme910ORCID,de Vink Erik11ORCID

Affiliation:

1. University of Surrey, Guildford, United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland

2. Ecole Nationale Supérieure d'Informatique pour l'Industrie et l'Enterprise, Evry, France

3. Aarhus Universitet, Aarhus, Denmark

4. University of Toronto, Toronto, Canada

5. University of New South Wales, Sydney Australia

6. ETH Zurich, Zurich Switzerland

7. Federal University of Rio Grande do Sul, Porto Alegre, Brazil

8. Cornell University, Ithaca, United States

9. Defence Science and Technology Group, Brisbane, Australia

10. School of ITEE, The University of Queensland, Saint Lucia, Australia

11. Eindhoven University of Technology, Eindhoven, Netherlands

Abstract

Formal Methods (FM) radically improve the quality of the code artefacts they help to produce. They are simple, probably accessible to first-year undergraduate students and certainly to second-year students and beyond. Nevertheless, in many cases, they are not part of a general recommendation for course curricula, i.e., they are not taught — and yet they are valuable. One reason for this is that teaching “Formal Methods” is often confused with teaching logic and theory. This paper advocates what we call FM thinking : the application of ideas from Formal Methods applied in informal, lightweight, practical and accessible ways. And we will argue here that FM thinking should be part of the recommended curriculum for every Computer Science student. For even students who train only in that “thinking” will become much better programmers. But there will be others who, exposed to those ideas, will be ideally positioned to go further into the more theoretical background: why the techniques work; how they can be automated; and how new ones can be developed. Those students would follow subsequently a specialised, more theoretical stream, including topics such as semantics, logics, verification and proof-automation techniques.

Publisher

Association for Computing Machinery (ACM)

Reference41 articles.

1. Introducing Formal Methods to First-Year Students in Three Intensive Weeks

2. Association for Computing Machinery ACM. 2023. CS2023: ACM/IEEE-CS/AAAI Computer Science Curricula. ACM. https://csed.acm.org/.

3. Lorin Anderson David Krathwohl Peter Airasian Kathleen Cruikshank Richard Mayer Paul Pintrich James Raths and Merlin Wittrock. 2001. A Taxonomy for Learning Teaching and Assessing: A Revision of Bloom’s Taxonomy of Educational Objectives. Pearson.

4. Invariant based programming: basic approach and teaching experiences

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