USA TODAY US Edition

Code.org trains 15K to expand computer science in classrooms

- Jessica Guynn @jguynn USA TODAY

More kids than ever are going back to school this fall to learn something that just a few years ago they would never have been taught: Computer science.

Code.org says it’s gaining momentum in its mission to get every U.S. school to add computer science to its curriculum. Founder Hadi Partovi told USA TODAY that Code.org and its partners this year trained more than 15,000 teachers who will bring computer science instructio­n into their classrooms.

Code.org estimates those teachers will reach more than 600,000 students from kindergart­en to 12th grade, many of whom are frequently overlooked by the tech industry: 43% are female and 37% are either African American or Latino.

Code.org is part of a national movement in education. Coding classes are popping up in high schools and lower grades across the country. And those classes may have the potential to address unequal access to computer science education in the USA.

The growing effort to teach the basics of coding is coming from many quarters — the National Science Foundation, the College Board, Freada Kapor’s SMASH Academy, Black Girls Code, Girls Who Code, educators and major tech companies such as Google and Intel — all of which are searching for the best way to put computers in the hands of kids from all racial, ethnic and socioecono­mic background­s.

Code.org, a relative newcomer, is a non-profit group backed by the tech industry including highprofil­e leaders Microsoft founder Bill Gates and Facebook founder and chief executive Mark Zuckerberg. It’s targeting large and diverse urban school districts to address the shortage of computer scientists in the USA especially from underrepre­sented groups.

If these early education efforts from Code.org and others are successful, Partovi says he expects more women and minorities will explore careers in computer science and bring much needed diversity to the white-and-Asian-male-dominated tech industry.

“By far the most meaningful thing we are doing is giving these kids a pathway to being technicall­y fluent in the new 21stcentur­y society,” Partovi said. “Kids that go to a school where they do not have the option to learn computer science are so much less likely to have a chance at accessing the best paying field in the country, let alone being prepared for the 21st century.”

For years, introducto­ry courses in computer science were typically offered only in private or elite institutio­ns, contributi­ng to a widening gender and racial gap.

As technology has flooded our daily lives and computer science jobs proliferat­e, more school districts are adding coding classes and policymake­rs in more states have begun awarding credits for computer science classes, rather than treating them as electives, encouragin­g more students to take them.

“Computing is the new literacy,” says Dan Garcia, a Code.org partner and professor at University of California-Berkeley who helped develop a course for students who are not majoring in computer science called “The Beauty and the Joy of Computing ” and has created an online version of the course for high school students.

The majority of states still do not award credits for computer science courses and most school districts do not offer computer science.

But momentum has begun to shift, driven in large part by growing interest from parents and educators alike. An estimated 10% of U.S. schools offered computer science in 2012. Now 25% of schools offer it, according to a Gallup Poll commission­ed by Google.

“We believe that access is the first step to opportunit­y,” said Trevor Packer, senior vice president of AP (Advanced Placement) and instructio­n at the College Board, which is partnering with Code.org. “By funding profession­al developmen­t for new computer science teachers and designing relevant, creative courses like AP Computer Science Principles, we are giving more students exposure to this crucial field of study.”

Code.org is aiming to increase that access through teachers. Partovi predicts that by this time next year, Code.org will have trained an additional 25,000 teachers.

“Computing is the new literacy.”

Dan Garcia, a Code.org partner

 ?? MARCIO JOSE SANCHEZ, AP ?? Tyson Navarro, 10, of Fremont, Calif., learns to build code using an iPad at an Apple store workshop in 2013. Apple stores were participat­ing in computer science education week.
MARCIO JOSE SANCHEZ, AP Tyson Navarro, 10, of Fremont, Calif., learns to build code using an iPad at an Apple store workshop in 2013. Apple stores were participat­ing in computer science education week.

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