Wednesday, December 6, 2017

#HourofCode in NMS Tech Classes 2017





NMS Tech Integration Class Creates Their Own Google Doodles In An Hour of Coding

Ms. Falconer's Tech Integration class has started engaging in "An Hour of Code" here at NMS the past couple of days and it will go into next week.  

This has been something we have participated in past couple of years with all three grades to celebrate Computer Science Education Week, but it has grown in size and in what the students can do in all of her classes to include every student here at the Nichols.

Just to give you some background, here is some information from the official "Hour of Code" website

The Hour of Code is a global movement reaching tens of millions of students in 180+ countries. Anyone, anywhere can organize an Hour of Code event. One-hour tutorials are available in over 40 languages. No experience needed. Ages 4 to 104.

The Hour of Code is a one-hour introduction to computer science, designed to demystify code and show that anybody can learn the basics.


Anybody can host an Hour of Code anytime, but the grassroots campaign goal is for tens of millions of students to try an Hour of Code during December 5-11, in celebration of Computer Science Education Week. Is it one specific hour? No. You can do the Hour of Code anytime during this week. You're welcome to split up the Hour of Code into multiple sessions so long as your students finish the Hour of Code tutorial. Just do whatever works best for you and your students. (And if you can't do it during that week, do it the week before or after).

The Hour of Code is organized by Code.org, a public 501c3 non-profit dedicated to expanding participation in computer science by making it available in more schools. 

The goal of the Hour of Code is not to teach anybody to become an expert computer scientist in one hour. One hour is only enough to learn that computer science is fun and creative, that it is accessible at all ages, for all students, regardless of background. 

For this year's #HourOfCode, Ms. Falconer had our students utilizing the program Scratch and were creating the "Google Doodle."


I sat down in our 7th Grade Tech class to also give it a try myself this year, as I did last year.  It was an excellent experience to see our students do all the 21st Century Skills we want them to be able to do:  problem-solve, critically think, collaborate, and create using technology.  It is always fun to watch our students make mistakes, learn from them, and then attack problems in different ways.


I personally jumped in myself and did the "one hour of coding" as well.  I will just say that it is critical thinking, problem-solving, and working through failure at its best.  It also works the person through collaboration, for multiple times I had to turn to the students around me for help.  It is awesome.  And more than that, it was fun.

Mr. G's Doodle

Thank you, Ms. Falconer, for jumping us into this 21st Century learning opportunity.

Check out some of the pictures of our students doing the Hour of Code.  Notice that their Doodles are much better than mine.  ;-)