Category Archives: Coding Education

Karlie Kross Discusses Making Coding Cool for Girls


You can add Karlie Kross to the chorus of people trying to engage more young girls in coding. The Daily Mail reports on this in a recent article titled “
Karlie Kloss reveals why she’s determined to make coding cool for girls while posing for sultry photo shoot for FLARE magazine.”

Caitlin O’Toole of the Daily Mail writes, “The beauty told FLARE she has recently enrolled at New York University, and is having fun picking out her courses. And she shared her love of a surprising hobby – coding. ‘It’s always fascinated me, but it’s not a subject I was taught in school,’ she said of her programming passion. ‘So last year, I decided to take a coding crash course and I ended up LOVING it.’ The model now encourages other women and girls to take up coding, and even donated $20,000 to New York’s Flatiron School for a scholarship to encourage women to code. The model told the publication that she feels a responsibility to be a good example to young people and admitted that she wants other women to follow in her footsteps by taking the course. ‘There’s a big misconception that coding is strictly mathematical; it’s actually incredibly creative,’ she told FLARE. ‘Code runs everything around us, and young women are so important to defining the future.’”

Education Dive also takes a look at coding education for girls in a recent article titled “Coding courses provide entry point for girls in tech.” Kate Schimel of Education Dive writes, “In a Girls Who Code course hosted this summer by the Florida State University, female students taught robots to dance, worked in groups to fix coding problems, and gained confidence for entering the male-dominated tech field… The course is one way Florida educators are trying to get more girls involved in computer science and tech, as few currently enter STEM fields… Meanwhile, Miami-Dade schools have introduced computer science classes as early as kindergarten, in part to engage female students in technology early on.”

For young girls in California, there’s no better option for coding education than CodeRev Kids. With us, children get a customized coding education that allows them to create everything from apps to games to robots.

Our program emphasizes computational thinking, which encompasses a wide range of programming concepts and languages. Our lessons build upon one another and we adjust starting points to each student’s level of expertise. Thus, the entire curriculum is customized. In addition to being the most educational tech camp out there, we also keep the focus on having fun. As a result, our students stay engaged while learning to blend creativity with technology.

If you want to give your daughter the best coding education opportunity, look no further than CodeRev Kids!

Wired Argues You Should Be Coding in Your Physics Class

CodingAccording to Wired Magazine, if coding isn’t part of your Physics course, something is wrong. Rhett Allain of Wired explores this in a recent article titled “You Should Be Coding in Your Physics Course.”

Allain writes, “IT’S NEAR THE start of a new semester of physics. Many faculty are working on their plans for introductory physics courses. How many tests should there be? What about homework? Do I want to cover fluids? What about numerical calculations? Let’s talk about the numerical calculations. Sadly, I think the majority of physics faculty don’t even consider to include numerical calculations in their physics courses. Of course, by numerical calculations I mean the process of breaking a complicated problem into many smaller (and easier) problems. Since this makes many problems to solve, the simplest strategy is to use some type of computer. Thus some people might call this computational physics or even physics coding. Call it what you like, but I think it’s an important topic to cover in introductory classes. What are some of the reasons faculty don’t include numerical calculations? Here are some common concerns for faculty along with my reply. ‘This is not a computer science class.’ Well, that’s true. This is a physics courses. However, this is also not an English class. Does that mean that there should be no writing or reading? It’s not a math class, but students should still use math. It’s not an art class, but students should still be able to draw force diagrams. Physics is not ONE THING in isolation from all other things. Really, there are no classes that could just stand by themselves. Could you imagine any course that didn’t use words and instead only had pictures? No, that would be difficult. Physics has to use many different fields to study the nature of the universe. That’s what makes it so awesome. Of course it’s not just faculty that say ‘this isn’t a computer class’—students think this too. Here is my response to them.”

If you’re looking to give your child a foundation in coding that could lead to a prosperous career, your best bet is CodeRev Kids. At CodeRev Kids, we customize your child’s coding education, making lessons both highly informative and fun.

Our lessons emphasize computational thinking, which encompasses a wide range of programming concepts and languages. These lessons build upon one another and we adjust starting points to each student’s level of expertise.

Even though we are the most educational tech camp out there, we also keep the focus on having fun. By doing this, our students stay engaged while learning to blend creativity with technology.

Contact us to enroll in or simply learn more about our different afterschool programs.

Coding Gives Prisoners a Second Chance

coding prisonersFrom baristas looking for new careers to prisoners looking to make the most of second chances, coding offers a vast array of opportunities. BBC explores this in a recent article titled “Can computer coding help prisoners find a new life?

Christian Parkinson of BBC takes a look at the situation in a video and writes, “Computer software, apps and websites are all made using coding languages or code for short. But despite the importance of coding, there is a major global shortage of people with the right skills. One group in South Africa is working to change that and hopes to create better opportunities for former prisoners. Brothers For All is an organisation founded by former criminals who now teach coding both in poor neighbourhoods and in prison.”

WBUR examines coding as a second career path in a recent article titled “Coding Camps Climb Professional Ranks.” Tom Ashbrook of WBUR writes, “Computer software coding bootcamps are grabbing headlines lately. Two or three months of intensive training in writing code or analyzing data and – boom – the twentysomething on the cover goes from waiting tables at $20,000 a year to code warrior glory at $100,000 a year. Crash courses in software coding – ‘bootcamps’ – are springing up all over. A lot of grads do appear to be getting good jobs. What’s the magic? The demand? The need being filled? And is this the future of a train-for-the-job economy? This hour On Point: bootcamp, career change, and the US labor market now.”

The best way to help your child get a leg up on coding is to start early. When it comes to coding education, you won’t find a better option out there than CodeRev Kids. We offer a wide variety of courses that allow your child to not just code, but see the fruits of his/her efforts by creating robots, apps, websites, games, and much more.

At CodeRev Kids, we emphasize computational thinking, which encompasses a wide range of programming concepts and languages. Our lessons build upon one another and we adjust starting points to each student’s level of expertise. This creates an entire curriculum that is customized. In addition to being the most educational tech camp out there, we also keep the focus on having fun. As a result, our students stay engaged while learning to blend creativity with technology.

For more information, check out our different after school tracks of STEM and coding Camps!

Coding Considered “Child’s Play” for Dubai Startup

dubai-arab-emissionsWhenever we discuss the need for more coding education, our eyes tend to look overseas at countries where education, in general, tends to be more of a priority. We look at the youth in these countries as the future of our workforce, especially if we don’t improve our coding education efforts. To get an idea of what the state of coding education looks like overseas, consider a recent article for the National titled “For one Dubai start-up, computer coding is child’s play.”

Hareth Al Bustani of the National writes, “On one side of the room, children are building worlds and on the other, websites. A boy taps away at his keyboard, typing commands and tying up loose ends. He appears in his element, even if the name of the language he is using – Hyper Text Markup Language (HTML) – would be enough to put most people off. ‘I’m making a ninja profile page,’ says Eissa Al Mulla, a nine-year-old Emirati, pointing to a screenful of text commands. He switches over to a preview of the web page and, like magic, it all makes sense. ‘I have to insert a picture and then write something about him, and then his interests, jobs and where he’s lived,’ says Eissa. The ninja, according to the webpage, is 23. ‘He likes backflips, teriyaki steak and lurking in the darkness. His jobs are protecting the city, defending against enemies and chopping fruit with his sword. He’s lived in Shanghai, Beijing and Tokyo,’ reads Eissa. The page is basic – a white background, one image and text of varying sizes and formatting – but Eissa has built it entirely using code. ‘It’s quite simple; it’s not that hard really. I’m just using indents to make it more organised.’ Eissa is on just his second day at the Coding Circle, an educational start-up based at Impact Hub Dubai. The web development course, which teaches HTML, CSS (Cascading Style Sheets) and JavaScript, is taught mainly by Sajjad Kamal, 26.”

If you’re looking to get your child up to speed when it comes to coding, there’s no better option than CodeRev Kids. At CodeRev Kids, we focus on Computational Thinking, which encompasses a wide range of programming concepts and languages. Our lessons build upon one another and we adjust starting points to each student’s level of expertise. As a result, the entire curriculum is customized. In addition to having the most educational tech camp out there, we also keep the focus on having fun. Thus, students stay engaged while learning to blend creativity with technology.

With a membership, students come into our center for customized class time between 10-25 hours per month, depending on the plan you choose. Class time hours are available anytime before 7pm on weekdays and between 10am – 3pm weekends.

Whatever coding education needs you might have, look no further than CodeRev Kids!

 

How Coding Can be a Career Game Changer Even if You Didn’t Start in Tech

coding-career-laptopIn South Florida, coding classes are booming. The Miami Herald takes a look at this in a recent article titled “South Florida’s hottest education trend: Coding class.”

According to the author of the article, “So like an increasing number of kids across South Florida, Daniel spent some of his summer days in an air-conditioned classroom, learning the first steps of something many people find daunting — crafting computer code. His immersion started simply. He played Minecraft, a video game where users construct a world with 3-D blocks, and then he learned to create changes in that virtual world to suit his liking. The importance of knowing how to code is no longer some secret shared among techies in Silicon Valley. Last year, President Barack Obama called on kids to start coding, and some celebrities you wouldn’t necessarily identify as geek types — like Shakira and Ashton Kutcher — spoke out about how all students need to develop the skill. In South Florida this summer, educators and entrepreneurs set up shop in classrooms and day care centers to host coding camps for kids of all ages and grades. While some were low cost or supported by grants, other ran as as much as $2,000 for two weeks.”

While youth in South Florida are taking early steps to get their coding education, adults throughout the country are doing their best to catch up with the changing market. The New York Times examines this in a recent article titled “As Tech Booms, Workers Turn to Coding for Career Change.” Steve Lohr of the New York Times writes, “After Paul Minton graduated from college, he worked as a waiter, but always felt he should do more. So Mr. Minton, a 26-year-old math major, took a three-month course in computer programming and data analysis. As a waiter, he made $20,000 a year. His starting salary last year as a data scientist at a web start-up here was more than $100,000. ‘Six figures, right off the bat,’ Mr. Minton said. ‘To me, it was astonishing.’ Stories like his are increasingly familiar these days as people across a spectrum of jobs — poker players, bookkeepers, baristas — are shedding their past for a future in the booming tech industry. The money sloshing around in technology is cascading beyond investors and entrepreneurs into the broader digital work force, especially to those who can write modern code, the language of the digital world.”

For youth in California, the best bet for a comprehensive, customized coding education is CodeRev Kids. At CodeRev Kids, we focus on Computational Thinking, which encompasses a wide range of programming concepts and languages. Our lessons build upon one another and we adjust starting points to each student’s level of expertise. As a result, the entire curriculum is customized. In addition to having the most educational tech camp out there, we also keep the focus on having fun. Thus, students stay engaged while learning to blend creativity with technology.

Whatever coding education needs you might have, the best bet for your child is CodeRev Kids!

 

Utah County Girls Learn Both Coding and Networking with Executives

coding-php-womenCoding education is fun. For girls in Utah County, it’s also an early exposure to the business world. The Daily Herald discusses this in a recent article titled “Girl Code: Utah County girls learn coding, share products with execs.”

Karissa Neely of the Daily Herald writes, “It takes multiple lines of computer code to make even the simplest animation, game, website or story-board, but the girls at InsideSales.com’s first-ever coding camp tackled it all. The camp lasted from Tuesday to Friday, but the 37 girls, ages 7-14, were not hunched over computers the whole time at the InsideSales offices in south Provo. There was plenty of talk about code, but there was almost just as much time devoted to building teams and learning how to work together. In one such activity, the girls were broken up into small groups and given the same materials — tape, straws, cardboard, etc. — and told to create a holder that would protect a raw egg from cracking when dropped from a roof. Two of the six groups were actually successful in protecting their egg. ‘For all the groups, we saw that it really helped them see how good teams work together and collaborate,’ said Michael Plante, vice president of marketing at InsideSales. The girls, coming from all over Utah County, and even a bit beyond, needed those skills to do their final projects that were the culmination of the week’s efforts. With the coding skills they learned, 15 groups built an app, an animation, a movie, a game, or a website, and shared it Friday afternoon with their parents and InsideSales executives.”

At CodeRev Kids, we understand the need for coding education is imperative. By 2020, 1 million computing jobs will go unfilled in the United States due to a lack of appropriate preparation of our future workforce. As of right now, students are graduating from excellent universities without the ability to obtain positions that utilize their expertise, yet someone who graduates from college with a computer science degree is very likely to obtain a desirable and high earning position immediately.

In order to help give your child all the opportunities that a computer science degree will provide, we give him/her a foundation based on Computational Thinking, which encompasses a wide range of programming concepts and languages. Our lessons build upon one another and we adjust starting points to each student’s level of expertise, thus making the entire curriculum customized.

Not just are we known for being the most educational tech camp out there, we also keep the focus on having fun. Because of this, our students stay engaged while learning to blend creativity with technology.

If you think CodeRev Kids could be right for your child, check out our afterschool programs and summer camps!

Using Coding to Bring Together Different Faiths

different-beliefs-codingCoding doesn’t just bring computer enthusiasts together. Coding education can help to unite different cultures and people of different beliefs. Consider a recent article from the Huffington Post titled “Interfaith Girls Coding Class Teaches Students The Common Language Of Computers.”

Antonia Blumberg of the Huffington Post writes, “Sponsored by Near Neighbours, an interfaith wing of the Church Urban Fund, and funded by a grant from Department for Communities and Local Government, the coding class aims to expose students to faiths and cultures they may have previously had little contact with. Twenty-six girls, ages 12 and 13, were enrolled in the inaugural eight-week after-school class that ran from April 29 to June 17. The program aimed to equip the students with coding skills in Python, CSS and JavaScript. The girls came from different faith backgrounds and were enrolled at one of three schools: London’s Ayesha Muslim School, Maria Fidelis Catholic School and the Yavneh College Jewish School. Students were chosen by their school based on their IT skills, willingness to take on extra-credit and interest in engaging with people of other faiths, project founder Rabbi Natan Levy told The Huffington Post. Levy enlisted the help of Hannah Waxman, a local engineer at software company ThoughtWorks, to design and teach the class. The rabbi said he hopes to continue the course in the fall. ‘Computer coding felt like such an obvious focal point for this project, not least because it is an emerging field, but even more so because in this currently fractured world it holds promise as a shared language,’ Levy said. Just 11.2 percent of technology leadership jobs in Europe are held by women, according to a report by Gartner called the ‘2014 CIO Agenda: A Perspective on the Priorities of Women and Men.’ The percentage of women holding positions as chief information officers for technology companies has remained static at just 14 percent since 2004.”

At CodeRev Kids, we’re dedicated to providing coding education to youth through customized courses. Our students learn Computational Thinking, which encompasses a wide range of programming concepts and languages. Also, our lessons build upon one another and we adjust starting points to each student’s level of expertise. This makes the entire curriculum is customized. In addition to being the most educational tech camp out there, we also keep the focus on having fun. As a result, our students stay engaged while learning to blend creativity with technology.

If you’re interested in giving your child a unique, first class coding education, check out our different after school tracks of STEM & Coding Camps!

The Coding Nightclub?

coding-night-clubThere are many places you might expect to see a coding training camp pop up. Chances are, a nightclub wasn’t the first place that came to mind. That is, however, exactly the case in Louisville. The Courier-Journal reports on this in a recent article titled “Coding-training site opens in former nightclub.”

Sheldon S. Shafer of the Courier-Journal writes, “An affiliate of the University of Louisville Foundation has transformed a former downtown nightclub, Icebreakers, into a hub for coding instruction, a field rife with many high-paying jobs. The Kentucky Innovation Center is overseen by Nucleus, a product of the UofL Foundation. Nucleus has developed the job-training site at 252 E. Market St. The building at Market and Floyd streets is near the UofL Foundation’s J.D. Nichols Campus for Innovation and Entrepreneurship, where a large new office building has filled up and a parking garage is under construction… The building’s classroom space is being called the Trinity Video Communications Center to recognize the Louisville company that donated the audio-visual equipment and engineering to make the system run on a wireless network. The new coding effort at the site was announced at a news conference Wednesday morning attended by Mayor Greg Fischer, Nucleus CEO Vickie Yates Brown and UofL officials. Fischer noted that by 2020, there will be 1 million more computer programming jobs in the U.S. than workers to fill them, and more than 10,000 of those jobs are expected to be available in the Louisville area. ‘Code Louisville is helping to quickly fill that need,’ Fischer said. ‘By taking coding classes in this updated space, local workers are gaining access to good-paying tech jobs.’”

On the west coast, we are just as aware of the need for coding education to prepare youth for the future of the workforce. At CodeRev Kids, we take a customized approach to your child’s education. Our lessons emphasize Computational Thinking. This is a concept that encompasses a wide range of programming concepts and languages. These lessons build upon one another and we adjust starting points to each student’s level of expertise. As a result, the entire curriculum is customized. In addition to being the most educational tech camp out there, we also keep the focus on having fun. This keeps students engaged while helping them to learn to blend creativity with technology.

If you’re looking for a quality coding education experience for your child, your best bet is CodeRev Kids!

New York City Startup Launches Jewelbots to Get More Girls Coding

coding-girls-jewelbotsThe latest effort to engage young girls in coding comes in the form of a bracelet. Quartz reports on this in a recent article titled “This hi-tech friendship bracelet wants to get girls coding.”

Alice Truong of Quartz writes, “Jewelbots, a New York City-based startup, is hoping its programmable bracelet will spark an interest in science and technology for little girls. The company launched a Kickstarter project yesterday to cover the cost of manufacturing, easily blowing past its $30,000 goal, and it plans to ship its first batch of bracelets in March 2016. Jewelbots is the brainchild of Sara Chipps, cofounder of the nonprofit group Girl Develop It, and Brooke Moreland, who previously founded a fashion photo-sharing app called Fashism. The two wanted to create a wearable that little girls would want to tinker with. ‘We didn’t want a teaching tool,’ Moreland tells Quartz. ‘We wanted them to be inspired by natural curiosity—something they think is fun.’ The bracelet was designed to be very basic. There is no screen, but its charm has a motor and four LEDs that can be programmed to change colors based on different triggers. For example, it can match the color of the bracelet of a girl’s best friend when she is nearby. A button on Jewelbots also allows wearers to buzz their friends. (Since many classrooms bar smartphone usage, the bracelets use a mesh Bluetooth network that allows for bracelet-to-bracelet communication without a phone.)… It’s estimated that only 20% of computer programmers are women. Though tech companies have become more transparent about the diversity of their workforce, they are still slow to hire women (and minorities) in technical roles. At Apple, 20% of its tech workers (as opposed to marketing or business development) are women. At Yahoo, Google, and Facebook, the numbers vary from 15% to 18%.”

At CodeRev Kids, we’re encouraged when we see innovative efforts to engage underrepresented groups in coding education. That is why we take a customized approach to your child’s curriculum.

We emphasize Computational Thinking, which encompasses a wide range of programming concepts and languages. Our lessons build upon one another and we adjust starting points to each student’s level of expertise. At CodeRev Kids, we are known for saying we are the most educational tech camp out there, but we also keep the focus on having fun. Our students stay engaged while learning to blend creativity with technology. For more information, check out our different after school Tracks of STEM and coding camps!

Louisville Teens Use Coding Program to Start Their Own Tech Company

coding-tech-startupFor many, youth coding education provides promise for job opportunities in the future. However, in the case of some Louisville teens, they are making those opportunities happen now. Urban Maxx puts a spotlight on these teens in a recent article titled “7 LOUISVILLE TEENAGERS CREATE A TECH COMPANY; BUILDING WEBSITES.”

According to Brad Harrison of Urban Maxx, “In an attempt to stay ahead of the technology curve, a collaboration between the Metro Louisville Department of Economic Growth and Innovation, Greater Louisville Inc, EnterpriseCorp, the Louisville Free Public Library, KentuckianaWorks and local employers was established to create the technology growth program known as Code Louisville. The program consists of a series of twelve-week sessions which uses the Treehouse coding program to train future software developers. According to the Code Louisville website, between 2010 and 2020, Louisville is projected to have a net increase of nearly 2000 new programmer and software developer jobs. In 2015, Code Louisville decided to expand its training program to include high school students from Louisville’s predominately black Russell Neighborhood, so it created a pilot program called Code Louisville After School. Classes for the the program would be held at the city owned learning center in the Russell Neighborhood known as The Beech… The program taught the students how to code using HTML, CSS, and JavaScript. Once they mastered the techniques, they designed the website for Coding at the Beech(atthebeech.com) and were then able to create their own website development company called Beech Technologies (Beechtech.org). Their newly founded company creates custom websites complete with a personalized internet domain, tech support, social media presence, software updates and frequent analysis reports to track the success of the client’s web presence. The websites are currently being offered at a discounted rate of $99 per month. Comparable services with their competitors generally range around $250 per month.”

At CodeRev Kids, we believe in empowering youth to start their own coding enterprises or fill the huge need for coding positions currently available in the workforce.

Our program emphasizes computational thinking, which encompasses a wide range of programming concepts and languages. CodeRev Kids’ lessons build upon one another and we adjust starting points to each student’s level of expertise. In other words, our entire curriculum is customized.

Also, while we are known for saying we are the most educational tech camp out there, we also keep the focus on having fun. This way, students stay engaged while learning to blend creativity with technology.

If you want to empower your child with a quality coding education, your best bet is CodeRev Kids!