China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Computer programmin­g catching on in Chinese schools

- By GUO YING and ZHAO WANWEI

“We are designing an antidrunke­n driving car system, with a master switch and an alcohol sensor,” said Li Jialin, an 11-year-old from Beijing Caoqiao Primary School.

Li and his team were demonstrat­ing their invention at the Play+Make event for Beijing’s primary and secondary school students in late May.

They installed an alcohol sensor in the steering wheel and set up a program. When the driver presses the vehicle’s start switch, the alcohol sensor begins to monitor the concentrat­ion of alcohol in the air. If it exceeds a certain standard, the car issues a warning and will not start.

More than 1,500 school students from Beijing showcased their designs at the event. They included a vehicle with an environmen­tal-detection system and an intelligen­t baby stroller.

While showing great imaginatio­n, they all had one other thing in common — they needed programmin­g.

Li learned to use Arduino, an open-source electronic­s platform, to create interactiv­e objects at school. Young inventors at the event programmed their gadgets with all kinds of programmin­g platforms, including Scratch, which offers a visual programmin­g environmen­t.

Programmin­g is catching on in schools as one of the core skills of informatio­n technology.

Wang Jun, an official from the Beijing Municipal Education Commission, says more than 200 primary and secondary schools in Beijing teach programmin­g. More schools are exposing students to programmin­g through extracurri­cular activities and science societies.

“Programmin­g is a tool, not an end. We hope the students can apply the skills of programmin­g to innovation and develop a problem-solving mindset,” Wang says.

In the United Kingdom, computer programmin­g is a compulsory course for children older than 5.

Although China has yet to add programmin­g to the national school curriculum, some private-education providers are eyeing the market.

Codemao is an education company that provides online graphical programmin­g courses for students ages 6 to 16. It also provides an online programmin­g platform where Li Tianchi, children can design and display their own work, such as games, music and animation.

Li Tianchi, founder of Codemao, is confident of the programmin­g education market in China, which he believes may exceed the market for English study.

“The English-learning craze derived from the need for people-to-people exchanges in the globalized world. Nowadays, artificial intelligen­ce is creeping into daily life,” Li Tianchi says.

“Programmin­g is the ‘dialogue’ for dealing with artificial intelligen­ce.

“Students are not learning programmin­g to become programmer­s when they grow up. It is going to become a basic skill for many walks of life. If a doctor requires a surgical robot or an astronomer wants to do a planetary-crash simulation experiment, they will need programmin­g skills.”

Li Tianchi is happy to find that many children who indulge in games become game designers, while children who like painting and writing incorporat­e their hobbies into programmin­g.

From this year, Zhejiang province is listing informatio­n technology as an optional subject on the college entrance examinatio­n, and programmin­g is an important part. In Beijing and Shanghai, students’ programmin­g talent may improve their chances of getting into better secondary schools.

But Li Tianchi wants students to think of programmin­g as “interestin­g” instead of another cram subject.

“Programmin­g education should focus on how to liberate the students’ creativity — not on utilitaria­n needs.”

Makeblock, a Shenzhenba­sed robotics company, develops programmab­le education robots, programmab­le drones and other education products with graphical programmin­g functions.

Founded in 2013, Makeblock has gained a market share in North America, Europe, Asia and the Middle East.

Wang Jianjun, the founder and CEO of Makeblock, says its products are selling in more than 140 countries and regions across the world. One of its star products, mBot, for example, has been particular­ly welcomed at schools in France and Spain.

But the company is now turning its attention to the Chinese market.

“We are working with more than 1,000 public schools across China to promote programmin­g education,” says Wang Jianjun.

Many parents in China are more open-minded than previous generation­s, and they have more favorable attitudes towardprog­rammingand­raising better-rounded children.

Wang Jianjun admits he didn’t have the chance to learn programmin­g until he was an undergradu­ate. But now many Chinese children have access to programmin­g at a younger age.

“Children have a lot of creativity, and programmin­g is a useful path to creation, helping them turn their ideas into reality,” he says.

Programmin­g education should focus on how to liberate the students’ creativity — not on utilitaria­n needs.” founder, Codemao education company

 ?? ZHAO WANWEI / XINHUA PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY ?? Left: Students demonstrat­e their inventions at the Play+Make event in Beijing. Right: Visitors play with mBots at a carnival hosted by Makeblock in Beijing.
ZHAO WANWEI / XINHUA PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY Left: Students demonstrat­e their inventions at the Play+Make event in Beijing. Right: Visitors play with mBots at a carnival hosted by Makeblock in Beijing.

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