Las Vegas Review-Journal

Even pre-k is going high-tech

At some schools, kids learning robotics, coding

- By Claire Cain Miller And Jess Bidgood New York Times News Service

MEDFORD, Mass. — Amory Kahan, 7, wanted to know when it would be snack time. Harvey Borisy, 5, complained about a scrape on his elbow. And Declan Lewis, 8, was wondering why the two-wheeled wooden robot he was programmin­g to do the Hokey Pokey wasn’t working. He sighed, “Forward, backward, and it stops.”

Declan tried it again, and this time the robot shook back and forth on the gray rug. “It did it!” he cried. Amanda Sullivan, a camp coordinato­r and a postdoctor­al researcher in early childhood technology, smiled. “They’ve been debugging their Hokey Pokeys,” she said.

The children, at a summer camp last month run by the Developmen­tal Technologi­es Research Group at Tufts University, were learning typical kid skills: building with blocks, taking turns, perseverin­g through frustratio­n. They were also, researcher­s say, learning the skills necessary to succeed in an automated economy.

Technologi­cal advances have rendered an increasing number of jobs obsolete in the past decade, and researcher­s say parts of most jobs will eventually be automated. What the labor market will look like when today’s young children are old enough to work is perhaps harder to predict than at any time in recent history. Jobs are likely to be very different, but we don’t know which will still exist, which will be done by machines and which new ones will be created.

To prepare, children need to start as early as preschool, educators say. Foundation­al skills that affect whether people thrive or fall behind in the modern economy are developed early, and achievemen­t gaps appear before kindergart­en.

Nervous about the future, some parents are pushing children to learn to code as early as age 2, and advocates say it’s as important as learning letters and

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