
Waterbear: Welcome Computational Thinking for Educators - Course Welcome to RoboMind.net, the new way to learn programming MIT App Inventor Get Started Follow these simple directions to build your first app! Tutorials Step-by-step guides show you how to create even more apps. Teach Find out about curriculum and resources for teachers. Forums Join community forums to get answers to your questions. Code & Conquer Most Important: Have Fun. And earn some badges. See how your strategy works out in different scenarios, challenge other players, receive points, earn badges and climb your way to the top of the leaderboard. Boost your coding skills. This game provides the perfect setting to introduce the key concepts employers ask you to know.
Code Monster from Crunchzilla <h2>Code Monster gets kids excited about programming. It is a combination of a game and tutorial where kids experiment with learning to code. <p> Code Monster use Javascript. Please enable Javascript if you want the play with the Code Monster. Otherwise, Code Monster will not be able to play with you. I'm Code Monster! Getting Started Lesson 1 BACK How to Play | Lesson Sections | About | FAQ | Terms of Use | Privacy | Contact | © 2015 How to Play Code Monster teaches kids and adults a little about Javascript programming! It's easy to play. Click on the Reset button if you really mess up your code and want to start over on a lesson. Code Monster saves what lesson you are on, so feel free to stop at any time and come back later. Have fun! About Code Monster from Crunchzilla is an interactive tutorial for kids that focuses on action. Projects start with simple boxes and colors, rapidly progressing into exciting experiments with simple animation and fractals. Frequently Asked Questions Sure!
Gamestar Mechanic Welcome :: CheckiO About Blockly Games Blockly Games is a series of educational games that teach programming. It is designed for children who have not had prior experience with computer programming. By the end of these games, players are ready to use conventional text-based languages. Blockly Games is a Google project to encourage tomorrow's programmers. The games are designed to be self-paced and self-teaching. If you enjoy Blockly Games, we recommend the following sites for further challenges: App Inventor — Use Blockly to write apps for your Android phone or tablet.Wonder Workshop — Use Blockly to program robots, then switch to text-based programming.Codecademy — Dive into JavaScript, Python, Ruby, or PHP. The Ultimate List of Resources to Teach Kids to Code As it’s such a rapidly moving space, i decided it was way past time for an update on our coding resources for kids article. So here it is, carefully categorised for your ease of use! in here is literally hundreds of hours of educational fun for kids aged three to 14. Visual Code Scratch Scratch is the classic. Hopscotch Hopscotch is like Scratch, but for mobile. Tynker Kodu Hackety Hack Hackety Hack is basically an open-source version of Scratch, Alice and Hopscotch. MIT App Inventor This project is drag-and-drop programming for app development. Bridge to Text Code Blockly You've played Scratch and Hopscotch and you're nearly ready for pure code. Code.org Code.org is a great introduction to basic syntax. Alice Alice uses an innovative 3D programming environment to teach object-oriented programming. Two awesome suggestions from GeekInSydney. S2JS is one of a set of a whole new set resources that teaches kids how to bridge the gap from Scratch to Javascript. WoofJS Games Minecraft Cargo-Bot Code Master
CS Fundamentals for grades K-5 Our Computer Science Fundamentals courses have about 15 lessons that may be implemented as one unit or over the course of a semester. Students create computer programs that will help them learn to collaborate with others, develop problem-solving skills, and persist through difficult tasks. They will study programming concepts, computational thinking, digital citizenship, and develop interactive games or stories they can share. If you like teaching CS Fundamentals, invite other teachers by sharing this handout. Our curriculum aligns to the newly revised 2017 CSTA standards and is available at no cost for anyone, anywhere to teach. No worries! For students new to computer science, each course begins with a grade-appropriate entry point and structured ramp-up of concepts. If you've been teaching Courses 1-4 and want to know how to transition to teaching Courses A-F, check out our Transition Guide. Recommended for Kindergarten (Supports pre-readers) Recommended for 2nd grade