Code Club is an after school club started by two highly-motivated young ladies, Clare Sutcliffe and Linda Sandvik. Their aim is to teach every child to code. Linda brought forward the strong point that every child can and should learn to code, even if they didn’t want to become a programmer, computer scientist or games designer. People learn how to cook eventhough they don’t want to become professional chefs. People learn Maths, English and Science until the age of 16, even though they may not wish to pursue careers in any of these fields.
Two key selling points
for coding are that 1) It teaches you about problem solving and 2) It’s fun.
Yes, it’s fun and the
two founders know how to have fun. Look at this video that they created:
Incredible!
They don’t (need to)
worry about assessment. And this is a key thing about code club. Linda is
originally from Norway but was educated in England. In fact I studied in the
same Department of Computer Science as her at Warwick University. We graduated
one cohort apart. And whilst Warwick is an excellent university, Warwick
suffers from the same “testing-based” curriculum that all UK universities
suffer from. Linda went as far to claim that when she studied Digital Media at
Hyper Island in Sweden, she learnt far more from her one and a half years there
than her three years at Warwick, partly because of the non test-based structure
of the course. She learnt to fail, and to fail often. I agree this is a major
area of the UK curriculum which needs an overhaul. This needs to start from Primary education
however, not just at University.
In less than a year,
Code Club has secured 1436 volunteers and
120 schools have
registered their interest. That’s pretty incredible growth; Pintrest, Twitter
and Instagram better watch out!
They mainly teach
through Scratch, a free piece of software
with a GUI that teaches users the importance of Syntax and the fundamental
building blocks of coding. One thing I didn’t know is that you can hit
<Share> on a Scratch game and that gives you a URL to share with your
family and friends. That’s awesome!
After user-testing her
projects on kids, Linda went further than most people in hacking Lego
Mindstorms to accept her Scratch instructions through an Arduino! James Stuttard also
later mentioned the Panther extension which gives even more advanced features.
Whilst Code Club is
not short on friends as the above video demonstrates, they have also worked
with Lego, Nesta, Mozilla, Coding for kids and Cas. However, they still need donations to
help establish themselves as a charity.
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