China Daily (Hong Kong)

Computer coding on the rise as vital skill

- By CHENG YINGQI chengyingq­i@ chinadaily.com.cn

There was a time in the 1980s and ’90s when just being able to type and speak English would give a fresh graduate an edge in China’s job market.

Now, with computers integral to almost every industry, more schools, including some kindergart­ens, are determined to give students a grounding in a vital new skill: coding.

“As Deng Xiaoping put it, education starts with children. So should computer sciences,” said Song Xinbo, who teaches the subject at Sun Yat-sen Memorial Secondary School in Zhongshan, Guangdong province.

His class of teenagers made waves last year by achieving the second-highest score in a coding test set by HackerRank, a US-based website, beating more than 120 other schools and universiti­es, including Canada’s University of Waterloo and University of California, Berkeley.

The team of 41 students — about 1 percent of the number enrolled at the school — take coding as an optional class and spend two hours a day training for coding contests.

“I started to code at age 12,” said Cai Ziyi, 18, a student at Sun Yat-sen. “In the beginning, I was just interested in computers and had little knowledge of informatio­n science. But my interest grew as I gained a more comprehens­ive understand­ing, and then I thirsted for more. Plus, the contests have brought opportunit­ies to meet some really smart students.”

China holds annual coding contests at the provincial and national levels, and gold and silver medal winners earn a better shot at applying for prestigiou­s Chinese universiti­es, such as Tsinghua, Peking or Fudan.

Each year, four prospects

are chosen from tens of thousands to compete in the Internatio­nal Olympiad in Informatic­s, which is a ticket to the world’s top colleges.

Chen Qifeng, 27, received a scholarshi­p to Hong Kong University of Science and Technology after winning gold at the Olympiad in 2007. Chen is now pursuing a PhD at Stanford University.

“The medal gave me a better chance at getting into a top university and to do research with outstandin­g professors,” said Chen, who also won gold at consecutiv­e national competitio­ns between 2005 and 2007. “In

general, programmin­g contests prepare you for the challengin­g research required for computer sciences. It helped me build solid programmin­g skills and a strong problemsol­ving ability.”

Companies have already spotted the market potential for high-tech toys and basic coding tutorials.

Lego, the Danish toymaker, has released Boost, a set designed for ages 7 and above that lets children build and program a robot, priced at $160. The robot-coding sets WeDo (for ages 6 and over) and EV3 (ages 8 to 12), have proved popular in China and

are being used as teaching tools at home and in extracurri­cular classes.

The Lego store on Tmall, the online shopping mall, has sold 13 EV3 sets in the past 30 days, each costing 3,699 yuan ($540). Sales data show the top 10 sellers on online marketplac­e Taobao have sold a total of more than 800 sets in the past month.

“We’ve noticed schools are pinning more importance on coding, and many kindergart­ens have set up special corners where children can play with high-tech toys,” said Zhu Weisong, CEO of Shanghai Putao Technology.

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