ACDICT periodically offers small grants for research projects in areas related to computing education. Project teams are required to comprise researchers from at least two ACDICT member institutions.
The former name, ALTA grants, appears in some historical documents but is no longer in use.
The reporting requirements have varied over the years, ranging from a presentation at the annual L&T forum to a formal written report. On this page we list recent grants and, where available, their written reports.
2026 grants - call for expressions of interest
ACDICT is pleased to announce its 2026 grant round. In a change from recent years, applications begin with a brief expression of interest, due by Sunday 15 March 2026. Following assessment of the expressions of interest, selected applicants will be invited to submit full applications by mid-May 2026. For details, see the accompanying document.
Clarification: an ambiguity in the original document could lead to the interpretation that ACDICT would provide up to $40,000 each for up to five projects. In fact ACDICT will fund up to $40,000 in total, to cover up to five projects.
2025 L&T grants awarded
Two grants have been awarded in the 2025 round. ACDICT expresses its appreciation and gratitude to the members of the community who took part in the grant assessment process.
2025: The other half of the equation: retention of underrepresented genders in STEM. Mark Wallis, Shaleeza Sohail, Fariza Sabrina, Emelie Ekenstedt, Aruna Jayasuriya, Ian Renner, Adrian Tan, Glen Livingston Jr
2025: Devising generative AI-compatible programming assignments and ethical assessment for computing education. Xianzhi Wang, Keith Heggart, Rodrigo N Calheiros, Xiaohui Tao
2024 L&T grants awarded
Five grants have been awarded in the 2024 round. ACDICT expresses its appreciation of the members of the grant assessment panel: Simeon Simoff, Western Sydney University; Anthony Robins, Otago University; Adrian Shatte, James Cook University; Ana Hol, Western Sydney University.
2023 ALTA grants awarded
2023: Incorporating Indigenous perspectives within ICT curriculum across Australian universities. Nicole Herbert, Felise Goldfinch, Dianna Hardy, Meena Jha, Carolyn Seton
2023: AI-powered pedagogy: exploring the effectiveness of generative AI as a learning assistant in the ICT discipline. Ritesh Chugh, Ahsan Morshed, Fariza Sabrina, Salahuddin Azad, Md Mamunur Rashid, Shahriar Kaisar, Sudha Subramani
2023: Virtual Ecologies: Modelling and Animating 3D Australian Landscapes. Thomas Chandler, Martin Potter
Recent grants and links to the available reports
2022: Sustainably enhancing social presence while balancing teacher and student well-being. Dianna Hardy, Jason Holdsworth, Hemmaphan Suwanwiwat, Trina Myers, Jason Watson, Sharon Altena, Wasana Bandara
2022: UPASS: From prototype to the community. Edmund Pickering, Samuel Cunningham, Sarah Dart, Caslon Chua, Sheona Thomson, Rick Somers
2022: Technical and educational guidelines for personalising assessments through assessment-as-learning in cybersecurity. Amin Sakzad, Judithe Sheard, David Paul, Ljiljana Brankovic, Matthew P Skerritt, Nan Li, William Billingsley, Simon
2020: Academic integrity policies, procedures, and good practices for online assessment in computing education. Meena Jha, Sander JJ Leemans, Regina Berretta, Ayse Bilgin, Trina Myers, Judy Sheard, Simon
2020: UPASS: an automated academic integrity detective uncovering ICT assignments shared online. Edmund Pickering, Samuel Cunningham-Nelson, Sarah Dart, Caslon Chua, Sheona Thompson
2020: Automated PDF fingerprint generation and detection to identify contract cheaters. David Cooper, Chris McDonald
2020: CAFÉ International project. Raina Mason et al
2020: Investigating the presence of ethics education within Australian tertiary ICT degree programs. Andrew Valentine, Scott Adams, Margaret Hamilton
2020: Digital trail of ICT authentic assessments with blockchain. Nagarajan Venkatachalam, Yu-Chu Tian, Raja Jurdak, Wageeh Boles
2020: Towards diversity in computing and IT: understanding the impact of the undergraduate experience on retention of women. Karin Verspoor, Marion Zalk, Jim Hogan, Katrina Falkner, Penny Kyburz
2020: Improving the learning environment of first year, first semester computer science students through tutor demonstrator unconscious bias training. Marion Zalk, Karin Verspoor, Victor Sojo
2018: Identifying the initiatives that influence first-year female students choosing computing degrees. Andreea Molnar, Therese Keane, Rosemary Stockdale
2018: Addressing student engagement issues for female and international students. Michael Morgan, Judy Sheard, Michael Butler, Simon
2018: Education for employability. Christabel Gonsalvez, Michael Morgan, Judy Sheard, John Grundy