Across
- 8. Are agreements among all team members. Typically spell out that all team members will provide input and provide protocols for communication, work together, and conflict resolution.
- 10. Include changes in how people communicate with each other and in how groups of people form and function, including circles of friends and structures of government
- 13. A problem solving strategy of breaking a problem apart into smaller subproblems
- 14. Either True or False. Iinclude "and," "or," and "not."
- 16. A standardized procedure that professionals use when they meet or begin work together
- 17. The component of a computer that follows instructions
- 19. Information provided to the computer from a person or from another computer, through input devices such as the keyboard, mouse, or touch screen
- 21. The way a human interacts with a computer through the input and output
- 23. A simplified description of some object or phenomenon. A computer-executed version, often predicting how an initial state will evolve over time.
- 24. Variables that can be used inside a procedure. The variables are initialized with arguments’ values when the procedure is called.
- 26. An action that triggers an event handler to be executed, such as user input or a timer's alarm
- 31. Technology helps increases or maintains the capabilities of a person with a disability
- 32. A variable that can be used anywhere in a program, unlike a local variable, which can only be used in one portion of a program. In App Inventor, procedures, event handlers, and for loops can create a local variable that can only be used inside that procedure, event handler, or for loop.
- 33. A sequence of characters
- 34. Discrete values with gaps between the values. Can be exactly represented using a binary representation. Can be duplicated exactly, without loss in quality. Can be transmitted error-free.
- 36. To determine the result of an expression
Down
- 1. A variable that stores information about an object
- 2. The contrast between two groups’ access to computing resources and the Internet on the basis of race, wealth, or national boundaries
- 3. Habits that help people solve problems with computers.
- 4. Gives a name to a procedure. People can then use the procedure without worrying about the finer grain details.
- 5. Written using only two values: zero and one. Everything can be approximately represented using a binary representation.
- 6. Data can be generated by sensors like thermometers, cameras, microphones, and keyboards and collected in storage.
- 7. Information sent by the computer to a person or to another computer, through devices such as a display or printer, speaker, or motor
- 9. A place in memory to store a value
- 10. A list of small steps to accomplish, breaking down a user story from the backlog
- 11. The values that a program provides to a function.
- 12. Include changes in the numbers types, and wages of jobs, and changes in the amount, type, and cost of services, goods, and materials produced
- 15. Parts of an interface
- 18. A value that a variable will have if no action is taken by the user
- 20. Computing helps people create sound, movies, 2D media such as screen images or paper art, 3D media including computer-controlled subtractive art (milling) or additive art (3D printing), user interface design, user experience design
- 22. The energy difference per electron between two locations. The energy can be converted to kinetic energy when electrons fall from low voltage to high voltage.
- 25. When two parties exchange information so that they trust that each other is who they say they are
- 27. To tack together two strings of characters, making one longer string
- 28. Any single typeset unit, including uppercase and lowercase letters, digits, punctuation marks, international characters like letters with accent marks, and special characters like tabs and carriage returns
- 29. A part of a program that runs when an event occurs
- 30. Continuous values instead of jumping from one value to another value without passing through the values in between. Most physical information such as position, wind speed, light intensity, or sound pressure, is analog.
- 35. A prioritized list of features or user stories to add to a program
