While computer programming and coding are becoming more common K-12 class
options, these subject matters are still a mystery to many students. A nonprofit
called Code.org is trying to change that by enlisting a star-studded entourage
of techies to help with its new "Hour of Code" campaign.
The goal of Hour of Code is to introduce computer programming to 10 million
K-12 students in the US during Computer Science Education Week. The event
happens December 9 to 15.
Joining the cause are several individuals, such as long-time philanthropist
Microsoft Chairman Bill Gates, Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg, Twitter co-founder
Jack Dorsey, and LinkedIn co-founder Reid Hoffman. Companies are also supporting
the initiative, including Google, Microsoft, Amazon, Apple, Yahoo, and
others.
"Thanks to the amazing support of new partners and donors, the Hour of Code
campaign will launch our long-term mission to give every student the opportunity
to learn computer science," Code.org co-founder and CEO Hadi Partovi said in a
statement. "This isn't just about the tremendous job opportunities in software
-- every 21st century child can benefit from learning this foundational
field."
The programming lessons will be provided to students via tutorials that can
be taken online, on a smartphone, or in a classroom setting. Different
educational groups have authored the tutorials.
Code.org is one of the groups that created a tutorial -- getting input from
Microsoft, Google, Twitter, and Facebook engineers. This tutorial is basically a
learning game that has the feel of Rovio's Angry Birds and PopCap Games' Plants
vs. Zombies and also features guest lectures by Gates and Zuckerberg.
While participating in Hour of Code is optional for schools and teachers,
those who do join have the chance of winning tech-focused prizes, such as 10GB
of free Dropbox storage, a full class-set of computers, and a group video
conference with either Gates, Dorsey, or Susan Wojcicki, Google's senior vice
president of advertising and commerce.
Code.org launched earlier this year to promote computer programming
education in schools and direct people to online coding tools. Founded by
brothers and entrepreneurs Hadi Partovi and Ali Partovi, Code.org operates
around the idea that every student should have the opportunity to code. The
foundation has an all-star board of advisers that includes investors Marc
Andreessen and Ron Conway, PayPal co-founder Max Levchin, and Dropbox founder
and CEO Drew Houston.
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