Year of Code

Year of Code is an independent, non-profit campaign to encourage people across the country to get coding for the first time in 2014. Through code people can discover the power of computer science, changing the way they think about, and get the most out of, the world around them.We will be banging the drum for all the fantastic coding initiatives taking place over the course of year and want to help many more people engage with technology and access important training opportunities.Over the course of the year we will signpost national and community tech events, crowdsource funding to help parents, pupils and educational organisations. We will commission detailed polling and analysis on how we can take coding far and wide.

via Year of Code.

p5.js

Hello! p5.js is a JavaScript library that starts with the original goal of Processing, to make coding accessible for artists, designers, educators, and beginners, and reinterprets this for today’s web.Using the original metaphor of a software sketchbook, p5.js has a full set of drawing functionality. However, you’re not limited to your drawing canvas, you can think of your whole browser page as your sketch! For this, p5.js has addon libraries that make it easy to interact with other HTML5 objects, including text, input, video, webcam, and sound.p5.js is a new interpretation, not an emulation or port, and it is in active development. An official editing environment is coming soon, as well as many more features!

via p5.js.

teach yourself to code

Four years ago, a friend lent me his Rails book and I took it with me on a family vacation and learned Rails. I was happy to discover that programming itself was fun, but also realized it was power. Anything I could imagine, I could build. Suddenly I was having new ideas about every problem I encountered, and the ability to act on them. It changed the way I thought.

Don’t believe people who say that learning to code is easy. Better to go in knowing that it’s hard and frustrating and that most of the time you will feel like you have no idea what you’re doing. There are a lot of people who will help you, at Meetups or on StackOverflow. But if you don’t know where to start, I made this site for you.

Have fun.

via teach yourself to code.

Adventures of Karel the Robot | NClab

This self-paced online visual programming course for beginners tells a story about the friendship of a little girl and a robot. It is being taught at K-12 schools, programming clubs, after-school programs, and in home-schooling families. The teacher or homeschooling parent do not have to know computer programming. Students progress at their own pace with the help of hints, video tutorials, and a textbook (preview PDF). Gamification and gently increasing complexity of projects ensure an exciting and fulfilling learning experience for all students. The course includes an optional algorithmic thinking pre- and post-test.

via Adventures of Karel the Robot | NClab.

Creating a Community of Learners With Coding – Edudemic

By Kate Wilson on July 7, 2014

Professional coders work collaboratively, and rarely does a computer scientist create a program solely on their own. Every successful programming project evolves as a result of Iterations of code, the merging of ideas, and the contributions of the individual team members. Not only does coding empower students to think logically and critically, to collaborate, and to create meaningful learning, but it also provides them an authentic opportunity to develop critical communication and collaboration skills.

via Creating a Community of Learners With Coding – Edudemic.

Kinderlab Robotics

KinderLab Robotics creates toys and educational tools that enable young children to learn technical, problem solving and cognitive skills in a developmentally appropriate and playful way.

KinderLab takes a whole-child approach to bringing robotics into early childhood. While other STEM education products exist for middle and high school students, KinderLab uniquely fills a need for a critical population: children under the age of seven.

Our products meet the intellectual, social, behavioral, and emotional needs of young children.

KinderLab products are based on over 20 of academic and field research into how children learn  programming and engineering. They include multidisciplinary curricula that integrate technical skills with literacy, the expressive arts, and cultural studies.​

via What we are doing.

Made with Code

 

Made with Code is an initiative to champion creativity, girls, and code, all at once. The movement is designed to do three things: To inspire girls by celebrating women and girls who are using code to do great things; to engage girls to try coding through introductory projects and resources; and to sustain their interest by creating alliances and community around girls and coding.

Made with Code

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Drop out of college; earn a six-figure salary coding | ITworld

By Christina Tynan-Wood, ITworld |  IT Management

June 10, 2014, 6:03 AM —

Savannah Kunovsky was working toward a computer science degree when she learned of Hack Reactor, a coding boot camp in San Francisco. She applied, got in, and ended up walking away from the four-year degree program.

At first, she intended to go back to school after sharpening her coding skills. But – a year later – she doesn’t think college will happen any time soon. “It was life changing,” she says of the immersive twelve-week program. It saved her the cost of two more years of college and landed her a well-paying job she loves. “You can earn the cost of college in one year after this program,” she says. But that’s not the only reason she did it. “College was an awesome experience. I grew socially. I figured out how to work hard and find balance in my life. But here? I am constantly stimulated and get to meet people from all backgrounds. College seems stagnant by comparison.” (Disclosure: She works as a software engineer at Hack Reactor.)

Savannah is part of a growing number of computer science students being lured away — sometimes right from high school — from a traditional four-year degree path directly into an IT job. Instead of investing four years and as much as $100K in a college degree, they learn to code at a boot camp or by taking online classes and go directly into lucrative and interesting work. No one’s path is exactly like anyone else’s but an ecosystem has sprung up – especially in the high-tech corridor of the San Francisco Bay Area – where there is so much demand for programmers that it is the actual skills – not a diploma that indicates they have those skills – that gets you in the door.

via Drop out of college; earn a six-figure salary coding | ITworld.

Ali Partovi: Why Learning to Code Is Imperative In Public Education | MindShift

“Education is about preparing kids for life, and public education is about helping people have equal opportunity, helping those who don’t have as much money have a more level playing field,” said Ali Partovi, co-founder of Code.org, in an interview at the Big Ideas Fest a few months ago.

via Ali Partovi: Why Learning to Code Is Imperative In Public Education | MindShift.