Waterloo Region Record

Coding not just for adults

App teaches kindergart­eners basic computer programmin­g

- Rodrique Ngowi

CAMBRIDGE, Mass. — This computer programmin­g app is so easy to use that even a kindergart­ener can do it.

Researcher­s in Massachuse­tts have created a basic computer coding app that they say is the first designed specifical­ly for children as young as five.

Kids who haven’t yet learned to read can use the app to craft their own interactiv­e stories and games.

With ScratchJr, children can snap together graphical programmin­g blocks to make characters and other elements in their project move, jump, talk and change size. Users can modify various elements in the paint editor, add their own voices and sounds, and even insert their own photos.

“When many people think of computer programmin­g, they think of something very sophistica­ted,” says co-developer Michel Resnick of the Massachuse­tts Institute of Technology.

“But we don’t think it has to be that way.”

Marina Umaschi Bers, his co-developer from Tufts University, cites research that shows children start to form conviction­s by fourth grade about how good or bad they are in math, science and technology.

“So most programs that introduce coding in fourth grade and up, it’s great, but they are coming kind of late to the party,” she says.

The project was funded by a $1.3-million grant from the U.S. National Science Foundation to help children learn to think creatively and reason systematic­ally.

The free app is already being used in kindergart­en classrooms at the Eliot-Pearson Children’s School in Medford.

“I learned to concentrat­e and use the imaginatio­n a lot,” sevenyear-old Talia Levitt says. “You can do, like, almost anything on it.”

Her classmate, seven-year-old Aiden Crott, adds, “I like making the background and then making the program and make the guy move around everywhere.”

ScratchJr was inspired by the popular Scratch programmin­g language for older kids. Developers say they redesigned the interface and programmin­g language to make it appropriat­e for younger children.

The app was launched in July on the iPad platform, and developers are working on versions for the web and Android devices.

“We don’t want necessaril­y every young child to become a computer scientist or to work as an engineer, but we want every young child to be exposed to these new ways of thinking that coding makes possible,” Bers said.

Claire Caine, a teacher at the Jewish Community Day School in Watertown, Mass., said she likes the app because it encourages kids to explore and figure out solutions to problems.

“Give it to them young enough, and they start doing it and it just becomes like brushing teeth,” Caine said.

“Nobody says they are not good at brushing teeth or they can’t brush their teeth.”

 ?? STEPHAN SAVOIA, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Aiden Crott, 7, works with his ScratchJr program on an iPad at the Eliot-Pearson Children’s School in Medford, Mass. The app teaches basic computer programmin­g to kindergart­ners.
STEPHAN SAVOIA, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Aiden Crott, 7, works with his ScratchJr program on an iPad at the Eliot-Pearson Children’s School in Medford, Mass. The app teaches basic computer programmin­g to kindergart­ners.

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