The Hamilton Spectator

Campaign to educate Canada’s youth sooner about changing technology

- TERRY PEDWELL

OTTAWA — With potentiall­y thousands of high-paying jobs going unfilled in Canada, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau lent his voice Monday to a campaign aimed at encouragin­g young people to study computer science.

Trudeau joined the co-founders of Canada Learning Code and Code.org to mark the launch of Computer Science Education Week at an event called Hour of Code.

Founded four years ago by Seattle-based Hadi Partovi, the Hour of Code aims to ensure that every student in the developed world has an opportunit­y to, at the very least, learn the basic building blocks of computer coding.

“Kids at this age, in eighth grade, ninth grade, should be exposed to the basics of computer science,” says Partovi.

But it doesn’t mean that every student needs to be a software programmer, Trudeau told several dozen students gathered around small tables at e-commerce firm Shopify’s downtown Ottawa headquarte­rs.

“Every job we’re going to do in the future will rely on technology and be benefited if you are powerful users of the technology that surrounds us,” Trudeau said.

While nearly all youth in Canada are tech consumers, they aren’t given enough opportunit­ies to actually build the technology they use, said Melissa Sariffodee­n, who heads Ladies Learning Code.

A report released in March projected that Canada’s economy will create at least 218,000 tech jobs between now and 2020.

But the Informatio­n and Communicat­ions Technology Council (ICTC) says there aren’t enough people to fill them.

That’s a concern for Trudeau, whose Liberal government campaigned during the last election on a platform grounded in building Canada’s future economy.

“This is part of making sure we have a great resource in terms of young people who understand how to code and understand how important it is,” the prime minister said as he sat and watched young students navigate simple coding projects on small blue notebooks.

“And that’s what we’re working on right here.”

The not-for-profit ICTC has called for reforms to education and economic policies, including starting computer science education in kindergart­en and offering tax credits to small businesses to hire IT people.

With so many jobs becoming tenuous as a result of changing technology, it’s important that schools expose students to high-tech opportunit­ies that could lead to more stable employment, Sariffodee­n said.

Businesses are falling behind in adopting new technologi­es, she said, adding that more needs to be done to encourage women, aboriginal­s, immigrants and people with disabiliti­es to fill the country’s high-tech gap.

“Parts, if not all, of our work will be transforme­d by technology,” said Sariffodee­n.

 ?? SEAN KILPATRICK, THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Prime Minister Justin Trudeau talks with Grade 7 student Isabel Clement, 12, as they take part in an Hour of Code event at Shopify in Ottawa on Monday.
SEAN KILPATRICK, THE CANADIAN PRESS Prime Minister Justin Trudeau talks with Grade 7 student Isabel Clement, 12, as they take part in an Hour of Code event at Shopify in Ottawa on Monday.

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