Apps for teaching kids programming
-
The question has been up before, but things change and it's time to see if there are any new programs around worth looking at. My kids are seven and eight and have finished Lightbot. What's your recommendations?
Wrong is evil and must be defeated. - Jeff Ello
-
The question has been up before, but things change and it's time to see if there are any new programs around worth looking at. My kids are seven and eight and have finished Lightbot. What's your recommendations?
Wrong is evil and must be defeated. - Jeff Ello
-
The question has been up before, but things change and it's time to see if there are any new programs around worth looking at. My kids are seven and eight and have finished Lightbot. What's your recommendations?
Wrong is evil and must be defeated. - Jeff Ello
Scratch - Imagine, Program, Share[^] Have you tried logo ? It can be fun to understand procedure and loops, and have instant visualization. And learn angles. https://www.calormen.com/jslogo/[^]
-
The question has been up before, but things change and it's time to see if there are any new programs around worth looking at. My kids are seven and eight and have finished Lightbot. What's your recommendations?
Wrong is evil and must be defeated. - Jeff Ello
LightBo... oh.
-
The question has been up before, but things change and it's time to see if there are any new programs around worth looking at. My kids are seven and eight and have finished Lightbot. What's your recommendations?
Wrong is evil and must be defeated. - Jeff Ello
I would suggest you teach them about spatial thinking and problem-solving. Basic skills that every programmer person needs. Then comes ethics in about 2 years. Skill in a particular technology isn't hard to achieve after that. Moreover, they might switch interests in a few years and not even like programming that much.
-
The question has been up before, but things change and it's time to see if there are any new programs around worth looking at. My kids are seven and eight and have finished Lightbot. What's your recommendations?
Wrong is evil and must be defeated. - Jeff Ello
Do they want to learn programming? At that age I was making go karts and stuff, dens in woods, rope swings. Perhaps let them be kids? :)
-
Do they want to learn programming? At that age I was making go karts and stuff, dens in woods, rope swings. Perhaps let them be kids? :)
Yes, and no worries, I'm not pushing it on them. The big one started playing around with Scratch at school, and since he knows I'm working as a programmer he wanted to learn more. So I showed him Lightbot. And now he wants more. I guess it's just a period, but why not. There are so much worse things they can do.
Wrong is evil and must be defeated. - Jeff Ello
-
Scratch - Imagine, Program, Share[^] Have you tried logo ? It can be fun to understand procedure and loops, and have instant visualization. And learn angles. https://www.calormen.com/jslogo/[^]
They're doing Scratch at school, but I'll have a look at Logo. Thanks.
Wrong is evil and must be defeated. - Jeff Ello
-
Yes, and no worries, I'm not pushing it on them. The big one started playing around with Scratch at school, and since he knows I'm working as a programmer he wanted to learn more. So I showed him Lightbot. And now he wants more. I guess it's just a period, but why not. There are so much worse things they can do.
Wrong is evil and must be defeated. - Jeff Ello
OK, fair enough. (My daughter, 15, looks at what I do and is in horror at the sheer complexity of it! :) )
-
Do they want to learn programming? At that age I was making go karts and stuff, dens in woods, rope swings. Perhaps let them be kids? :)
I started programming when I was 8 :-O
-
I started programming when I was 8 :-O
NERD! ;P
-
Still exists, still costing a fortune. :) And yes I might, if he keeps his interest. Just realized they have an app that doesn't need the physical lego, I have a look at that.
Wrong is evil and must be defeated. - Jeff Ello
-
NERD! ;P
My first program ever (Basic, Amstrad 6128) was a small database named "Cave à vin", for my father, to keep track of the bottles of wine in our cellar (all 25 of them :laugh: ). If that's not French ... :rolleyes: It had an opening splash screen with a bottle of wine filling an empty glass, animated. Which was about 85% of the code. :-D
-
OK, fair enough. (My daughter, 15, looks at what I do and is in horror at the sheer complexity of it! :) )
It's obviously not for everyone, especially not the under the hood stuff you do. How did you get into that by the way?
Wrong is evil and must be defeated. - Jeff Ello
-
My first program ever (Basic, Amstrad 6128) was a small database named "Cave à vin", for my father, to keep track of the bottles of wine in our cellar (all 25 of them :laugh: ). If that's not French ... :rolleyes: It had an opening splash screen with a bottle of wine filling an empty glass, animated. Which was about 85% of the code. :-D
Rage wrote:
splash screen with a bottle of wine filling an empty glass
For a splash screen it shouldn't have all ended up in the glass. ;P
Software rusts. Simon Stephenson, ca 1994. So does this signature. me, 2012
-
It's obviously not for everyone, especially not the under the hood stuff you do. How did you get into that by the way?
Wrong is evil and must be defeated. - Jeff Ello
Yes, I suppose what I do doesnt look fun or funky, has no UI. I guess I naturally gravitated to the low level stuff, I found it much more challenging and interesting. My second job was writing a driver for Windows. I only got it because there was no one around any more capable than I was, and I had no idea, I was just in the area, looking for a new role, and had a couple of years doing low level user mode stuff in windows. :)
-
My first program ever (Basic, Amstrad 6128) was a small database named "Cave à vin", for my father, to keep track of the bottles of wine in our cellar (all 25 of them :laugh: ). If that's not French ... :rolleyes: It had an opening splash screen with a bottle of wine filling an empty glass, animated. Which was about 85% of the code. :-D
I am impressed! THats pretty good for an 8 year old.
-
The question has been up before, but things change and it's time to see if there are any new programs around worth looking at. My kids are seven and eight and have finished Lightbot. What's your recommendations?
Wrong is evil and must be defeated. - Jeff Ello
u can get them a ps4 or xbox and let them play games...or give them their own computers with VR sets .... i'm sure they will love it...
Caveat Emptor. "Progress doesn't come from early risers – progress is made by lazy men looking for easier ways to do things." Lazarus Long
-
u can get them a ps4 or xbox and let them play games...or give them their own computers with VR sets .... i'm sure they will love it...
Caveat Emptor. "Progress doesn't come from early risers – progress is made by lazy men looking for easier ways to do things." Lazarus Long
Nintendo will do I hope.
Wrong is evil and must be defeated. - Jeff Ello
-
The question has been up before, but things change and it's time to see if there are any new programs around worth looking at. My kids are seven and eight and have finished Lightbot. What's your recommendations?
Wrong is evil and must be defeated. - Jeff Ello
I got this a few weeks ago: Homepage | Minecraft: Education Edition[^] To be honest didn't checked yet...
"The greatest enemy of knowledge is not ignorance, it is the illusion of knowledge". Stephen Hawking, 1942- 2018