Connected Code: Why Children Need to Learn Programming Front Cover

Connected Code: Why Children Need to Learn Programming

  • Length: 200 pages
  • Edition: Reprint
  • Publisher:
  • Publication Date: 2016-09-02
  • ISBN-10: 026252967X
  • ISBN-13: 9780262529679
  • Sales Rank: #1935142 (See Top 100 Books)
Description

Why every child needs to learn to code: the shift from “computational thinking” to computational participation.

Coding, once considered an arcane craft practiced by solitary techies, is now recognized by educators and theorists as a crucial skill, even a new literacy, for all children. Programming is often promoted in K-12 schools as a way to encourage “computational thinking” — which has now become the umbrella term for understanding what computer science has to contribute to reasoning and communicating in an ever-increasingly digital world.

In Connected Code, Yasmin Kafai and Quinn Burke argue that although computational thinking represents an excellent starting point, the broader conception of “computational participation” better captures the twenty-first-century reality. Computational participation moves beyond the individual to focus on wider social networks and a DIY culture of digital “making.”

Kafai and Burke describe contemporary examples of computational participation: students who code not for the sake of coding but to create games, stories, and animations to share; the emergence of youth programming communities; the practices and ethical challenges of remixing (rather than starting from scratch); and the move beyond stationary screens to programmable toys, tools, and textiles.

Table of Contents

Chapter 1 The Comeback Of Coding
Chapter 2 Connected Learning
Chapter 3 From Code To Applications
Chapter 4 From Tools To Communities
Chapter 5 From Scratch To Remix
Chapter 6 From Screens To Tangibles
Chapter 7 Connected Teaching
Chapter 8 Coding For All

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