In the United
Kingdom, the government has named 2014 the “Year of Code” and has started a
campaign to prepare all schools in the country to start teaching children to program
computers from the start of the next school year in September 2014. Prior to
then, all teachers have to ensure they have the right training themselves to be
able to teach computer programming.
Extra money has been promised from central government to support this
initiative.
The UK government
is responsible for setting out a national curriculum, which most schools have
to follow when devising their lesson plans for the year. In September 2014 coding will be introduced
to the UK school timetable for every child aged 5-16 years old, making the UK
the first major G20 economy in the world to implement this on a national level.
This is a landmark policy change that will arm a generation of school-leavers
with the skills for the 21st century, and “Year of Code” wants them to make the
most of this first class opportunity.
“Year of Code” is
an independent, non-profit campaign to encourage people across the country to
get coding for the first time in 2014. Through code, people can discover the
power of computer science, changing the way they think about, and get the most
out of, the world around them.
The campaign will
be banging the drum for all the fantastic coding initiatives taking place over
the course of year and wants to help many more people engage with technology
and access important training opportunities.
Over the course of
the year the “Year of Code” website will signpost national and community tech
events, crowdsource funding to help parents, pupils and educational
organisations. It will commission detailed polling and analysis on how to take
coding far and wide.
More on
this campaign can be found at: www.yearofcode.org
What do
you think of this? Do you feel that more schools should be teaching our
children how to program computers? Why do you think this might be important?
This is
an example of a youngster who taught himself to program and made a lot of money
from his skills.
British teenager
Nick D’Aloisio, taught himself to code at the age of 12, and created an
application program called Summly while revising for his mock GCSEs in 2011. He
made $30 million from selling it to Yahoo! in March 2013. At the age of 18,
D'Aloisio is now a product manager at Yahoo! The app has been rebranded Yahoo!
News Digest. The new app will give users news summaries twice a day. Each
summary is comprised of nine stories, with each article constructed from
multiple sources, which will feature tweets, videos and maps.
Here is
another example of a youngster with big ideas.
Jack Kim learned to
write HTML code at school and immediately decided to create Benelab, a search
engine that earns money for charity. His
company only employs youngsters, all staff members are aged 17, and it has
already donated thousands of dollars to numerous charities. Kim aspires to
donate $100,000 before graduation.
This
isn’t to say that everyone will have great business success simply because they
can code, but it does open up opportunities that you might not otherwise have
had.
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