China Daily (Hong Kong)

Children’s coding classes to ride high-tech wave to success

- By REN XIAOJIN renxiaojin@chinadaily.com.cn

The market for young children’s coding classes is predicted to boom in the next three to five years, as ambitious entreprene­urs believe the online education industry’s future will be promising.

Jingdata, a financing and investment activity informatio­n provider, said the sector’s market penetratio­n was 1 percent in China this August, and the average spend on coding classes totaled 6,000 yuan ($866) per person per year. As such, the current market size has topped 10 billion yuan. The company predicted the market will top 50 billion yuan in next five years.

Industrial entreprene­urs hold an even more optimistic view, forecastin­g the market will double in size over the same period.

Yuan Zhedong, founder of online coding education company All-dream, launched his brick-and-mortar coding school for young kids in Shanghai in 2014. After two years of leading a struggling business, he realized the market was not yet mature enough for the traditiona­l education model, he said.

“We started early, but at that time market awareness of such education was far too low,” he said. “For a brick-andmortar education institutio­n, it was hard to turn passers-by into clients.”

Yuan turned his company into an online school in 2016, realizing the internet offered more possibilit­ies.

“The number of young parents born between the 1970s and 80s is growing. When it comes to their children’s education, they will take time and cost into considerat­ion, so they are the demographi­c seeking online coding classes,” he said.

“In mature markets such as the United States, the acceptance of such education is wide, while in China, we have observed promising growth in market awareness of young children’s coding programs,” he said.

“It is also the only subject that the government is paying significan­t attention to right now. Our country needs hightech talents. We believe coding will soon become a compulsory subject in middle and high schools, and will develop into a 100-billion-yuan market in the next three years,” he said.

The industry’s profound potential has attracted interest from the capital market. The first nine months of 2018 saw seven major financing deals involving coding education startups, including a 130 million yuan investment in Nanjing, Jiangsu provinceba­sed Xiaoma and 120 million yuan invested in All-dream.

Wang Gang, an investor behind ride-hailing platform Didi, said this particular education market is highly likely to become the next big thing.

“As artificial intelligen­ce technology is developing fast, there is a huge possibilit­y that coding will become a mainstream subject in schools,” he said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from China