L. Rich, H. Perry, and M. Guzdial, A CS1 Course Designed to Address Interests of Women, Technical Symposium on Computer Science Education, Proceedings of the 35th SIGCSE technical symposium on Computer science education, pp.190-194, 2005.

F. Tew and G. , Tracking an innovation in introductory CS education from a research university to a Two-Year College, Technical Symposium on Computer Science Education, Proceedings of the 36th SIGCSE technical symposium on Computer science education, pp.416-420, 2005.

G. Ericson and . Biggers, A Model for Improving Secondary CS Education, Technical Symposium on Computer Science Education Proceedings of the 36th SIGCSE technical symposium on Computer science education, 2005.
DOI : 10.1145/1047344.1047460

M. Kölling, The Greenfoot Programming Environment, ACM Transactions on Computing Education, vol.10, issue.4, 2010.
DOI : 10.1145/1868358.1868361

R. Koster, A Theory of Fun for Game Design, Armor Games, issue.9, 2004.

K. Bromwich, M. Masoodian, and B. Rogers, Crossing the game threshold, Proceedings of the 13th International Conference of the NZ Chapter of the ACM's Special Interest Group on Human-Computer Interaction, CHINZ '12, pp.56-63, 2012.
DOI : 10.1145/2379256.2379266

P. Haden, The incredible rainbow spitting chicken: Teaching traditional programming skills through games programming, Proceedings of the 8th Australian Conference on Computing Education, pp.81-89, 2006.

. T. Huang, Strategy game programming projects, The Journal of Computing in Small Colleges, vol.16, issue.4, pp.205-213, 2001.

G. F. Kuder, Professional preferences, 1986.

G. F. Kuder, The Stability of Preference Items, The Journal of Social Psychology, vol.3, issue.1, pp.41-50
DOI : 10.1007/BF02288391

R. Hijón-neira and J. Á. Velázquez-iturbide, Merlin-Mo, an interactions analysis system for Moodle, Proceedings of the 16th annual joint conference on Innovation and technology in computer science education, ITiCSE '11, pp.340-340, 2011.
DOI : 10.1145/1999747.1999852

G. Drive and H. , Many Eyes IBM Research and the IBM Cognos software group