Connected Code : Why Children Need to Learn Programming

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Bibliographic Details
Title: Connected Code : Why Children Need to Learn Programming
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.
Authors: Yasmin B. Kafai, Quinn Burke
Resource Type: eBook.
Subjects: Constructivism (Education), Computer programming--Study and teaching (Secondary), Computers and children, Scratch (Computer program language)
Categories: EDUCATION / Computers & Technology, COMPUTERS / Human-Computer Interaction (HCI)
Database: eBook Collection (EBSCOhost)
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