Friday, November 30, 2018
Africa Code Week 2018
Monday, August 6, 2018
Thursday, July 19, 2018
Enugu Summer of Code 2018
ENUGU
SUMMER OF CODE
Enugu Summer of Code is
a holiday program hosted by Soparkids international in collaboration with local
and international partners to develop young people, especially kids in the area
of coding/programming. It is a practical-based program that focuses on catching
the interest of kids at a very young age in the areas of writing codes for
mobile applications, games and web sites. The summer program also deals with
the assembling robot hardware and writing the codes that control or instruct
these robots.
The main motivation
behind the Enugu Summer of Code is to introduce the kids to the unlimited
wonderful world of programming, artificial intelligence and digital technology,
early enough so as to maximize the high interest, creativity, drive and energy
associated with teens and adolescents in the development of practical solutions
for individuals, organizations and governments. Digital technology, especially
coding/programming requires enormous creativity and energy for maximum
efficiency. However, it has been observed that most people in the coding world
usually get involved (start learning) coding in their early 20`s and some in
their 30`s, when they are already being burdened with personal, family and
societal responsibilities. These responsibilities compete with their coding
interests for their creativity, energy and time; thereby reducing the heights
they could have attained in coding and digital technology. This factor alone
ranks high amongst the major reason for the slow development of the digital
technology in sub-Saharan Africa.
Having known this, we
cannot just sit and complain. We have to do something, a solution that will
work must be implemented as soon as possible so that Africa, Nigeria and the
South east in particular, will properly play their leading role in the global
scheme of things. This is the major motivation behind the Enugu Summer of Code.
If we can catch them (their interest) young, then the interest and the skill
can be easily and more efficiently developed to enable them become world class
developers of working solutions.
Programs
to be offered in the summer:
1. 1. Web and App design
2. Scratch programming
3. Game development.
4. Robotics.
5. 3D printing
2. Scratch programming
3. Game development.
4. Robotics.
5. 3D printing
Some
of our Content Partners are:
1.
Google CS first
2.
Scratch Team (MIT), USA.
1.
Africa Code Week
Who
is this program for?
Currently, Enugu Summer
of Code is mainly focused on teens of 6-18 years. The facilitating company,
SOPARKids International has training packages for young and older adults.
How
can one be a part of this?
To have your kid(s) take
part of this revolution, log onto www.soparkids.org/SUMMER.html and fill the application form. You will be contacted as soon as possible.
Give your kids this
opportunity and help us really realize our vision of raising the next Bill
Gates from this part of the globe.
Cheerz!!!
By Chibuike Ugwu
Labels:
ACW,
Africa Code Week,
coding,
Coding for kids,
Enugu,
Enugu Nigeria,
Google,
robotics
Thursday, July 12, 2018
Students earn gold in coding
A pair of Wabash College students each have earned a Gold Badge in coding through a partnership between the Independent Colleges of Indiana and Eleven Fifty Academy.
Joey Karczewski, a junior from Crown Point, and Patrick Marsh, a junior from Munster, garnered the honor through Smart Launch Tech, a coding program designed for liberal arts students. All of the 19 students from 14 private colleges around the state completed the month-long program on June 29, each earning the industry- and state-recognized Gold Badge Certification from Eleven Fifty, headquartered at Launch Fishers.
The students learned the basics of HTML, CSS and Java Script in a four-week boot camp held on the campus of Franklin College during the month of June. They completed assignments demonstrating badge competencies and compiled an e-portfolio, presented at the end of the program.
In addition to coding, students were exposed to the wide range of career possibilities within the tech field, including project and marketing management, data analysis, compliance, security and design
Smart Tech Launch was created to marry the technical skills of coding with the problem-solving approach of a liberal arts education.
Karczewski and Marsh are the second and third Wabash students to complete the coding certification in Smart Launch Tech’s two-year history.
What to you think of this story?
Wednesday, July 11, 2018
Girls in Tech’s AMPLIFY Competition for women
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Tuesday, July 10, 2018
IBM hosts summer tech camp for kids in Membertou
MEMBERTOU — A unique summer camp was hosted by IBM for the first time in an Indigenous community in Cape Breton.
About 15 Indigenous youth entering Grades 6 to 8 spent the past week learning various aspects of STEM — science, technology, engineering and math — at Membertou’s elementary school.
It’s only the second time employees from IBM’s client innovation centre in Bedford have held a summer camp in Cape Breton.
Val Lemay, who is the STEM youth co-ordinator for the IBM client innovation centre, said it was a “great opportunity” to pique the interest of students in the science and technology fields.
“I think STEM is slowly becoming more and more incorporated into school curriculums, which is great, and we just want to show them the opportunities they have with STEM-related interests and STEM-related fields and how the careers are really endless,” she said.
Early in the camp, the students conducted a fruit DNA experiment and covered a section on snap circuits where the children learned about electricity and how to make their own circuits using fans and light bulbs.
They also learned the basics of scratch coding on the school’s laptop computers and took a field trip to the Alexander Graham Bell National Historic Site in Baddeck.
On Thursday, Acadia University robotics director Gary Walsh explained, demonstrated and allowed the students to plug in computer commands enabling them to operate an EV3 (evolution 3) robot.
“This is what I love doing,” Walsh said. “One of the most fun parts of my job is the outreach with the kids.”
The Lego Mindstorms robots used by the students in Membertou are used in the First Lego League for nine- to 14-year olds. Competitions are held regionally at five Nova Scotia Community College campuses across the province — one of them held at the Marconi campus in Sydney — and top competitors then head to Acadia University each February to compete.
Walsh said the robots bring a “good strong foundation” of interest and intrigue to youth studying science.
“You might even look at it like a little hook because the robotics is the fun element that’ll eventually, hopefully, lead to something where because of the teamwork they use and the creativity and innovation they use to perfect their skills here, might interest them in a career in science someday.”
Bryson Morrison of Potlotek First Nation was the first in the program to program his robot to move forward in a straight line. The simple exercise brought a smile to his face.
“I like learning new stuff every day when I come here,” he said, adding he’s keen on science as a school subject.
Like Morrison’s lab partner, Liela Doucette of Membertou, this is his first time participating in a summer camp.
Doucette said using the robots has been the most entertaining part of the camp.
“They can move with computer stuff,” she said. “It’s cool.”
And it wasn’t her first time using robotics. A couple of months ago, Doucette and her schoolmates used iPads to send instructions to robots in the school gymnasium.
“I’d like to learn more about it and … learn how to do it on my own.”
Students in the summer camp spent Friday playing math bingo and figuring out how to calculate the area of their hands. The camp wrapped up with a tour of the Fortress Louisbourg.
The Mi’kmaw Economic Benefits Office played a role in bringing the IBM summer camp to Membertou.
Membertou Chief Terry Paul referred to the STEM camp as one way of “building Membertou’s future workforce.”
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