Tuesday, December 15, 2015

What Does Hour of Code Look Like In Vermont?

What did Hour of Code look like in Vermont?


Hundreds of kids from around Vermont built their awareness (and confidence) with computer science! Over two hundred Vermont schools signed up to participate in Code.org's Hour of Code event. Check out our own showcase of Vermont participation at http://thinkaboutcode.blogspot.com/ or get a really quick two min glimpse into what Hour of Code looked like in Vermont with the following video.





And for a closer  look, check out the collection of pictures you all submitted directly to Vermont’s Hour of Code site in our 2015 Gallery.






Many of you created your own multimedia stories. They were AWESOME!   We've added them on the Featured Stories page.


Some of you had guest speakers come directly to your school, while others were able to interact with guest speakers remotely as made possible by today’s  Video Conferencing technology (such as Google Hangout or Join.me). Thank you to Peter Drescher and the Agency of Education for recruiting some great role models for our students to interact with.   The great thing about this  guest speaker series is that you can view the archive (or parts of them)  anytime that works in your instruction.   Snippets ranging from advice to girls from female coders to troubleshooting excerpts can give your students a glimpse into the world of coding outside our schools.


Some of you saw the Robot Rodeo Announcement  as an opportunity to continue coding beyond and hour of code. From January to May, Vermont schools will be hosting (and training through code) a fleet of fun codable robots in preparation for an upcoming Robot Rodeo.  If your school is interested in hosting a robot, or know someone who would want to sponsor a robot, check out
robotrodeovt.blogspot.com



And if you are an educator who would like to grow your own ‘ability to code’, why not do it together through the upcoming January course (online) at Marlboro College - CREATE WITH CODE, EDU621D.W16 designed for educators with Little to No experience to gain confidence with code and how to integrate it in their classroom. Marlboro  College Graduate School  CREATE WITH CODE, EDU621D.W16


And a big CONGRATULATIONS to Chamberlin School for their $10,000 award from Code.org.




GREAT JOB Vermont!  

Note from Lucie: Thank you so much to everyone for participating in this collaboration. Although I was almost 3000 miles away, I felt like I was much much closer throughout the week. (of course the 75 gigs of Verizon data I used to collaborate with you helped a bit, too). I'm so proud of my fellow Vermont educators for all that you do for our students.

If you want to see your specific school’s submission to the http://thinkaboutcode.blogspot.com/ ,  just click on the hyperlink tag with your school’s name.  Some of the submission had no names, so I tagged them “NEWS”.

You can simply click on each day’s submission tag.

LABELS


Cambridge Elementary School Hour of Code Picture

Cambridge Elementary School students love a whole week of code!


Monday, December 14, 2015

Fwd: NCCC host our of Code


More pics from North Country Career Center
Teacher, Video Game and Web Programming
North Country Career Center, Newport VT



BFA St. Albans with some pretty serious coding projects







Peter Chesarek, BFA St. Albans Senior, presents his Raspberry Pi Project.



Mrs. Mason and Peter demo Khan Academy Coding Course


Student coding on Khan Academy.

Student connects to our Google Coder server to do some HTML and Java.


Our Google Coder Web Server (running on a Raspberry Pi B+).



NCCC Hour of Code


Fwd: NCCC HoC 2015 pics


NCCC students host Hour of Code

North Country students learn to code

Williston School District Learns to Code

Chamberlain School Receives $10,000 from Code.org



Press release: Computers are everywhere, but fewer schools teach computer science than 10 years ago. Good news is, we’re on our way to change this. If you have heard about the Hour of Code last
year, you might know it has made history.  In one week, 60 million students tried computer science!

That’s why EVERY one of the 230 students at Chamberlin School are joining in on the
largest education event in history: the Hour of Code, during the week of December 7­ - 13. Chamberlin was the one school chosen in Vermont, to receive $10,000 from Code.org to buy technology for their school for bringing these critical skills to its students for 2015

Google, Microsoft, Apple, President Obama, Bill Gates, Shakira and Ashton Kutcher have all backed the Hour of Code.  Over 500 partners are coming together to support this global
movement.  To date, 130 million students have tried the Hour of Code.  Half were girls.

Kate Ash from
Senator Leahy office
On Monday, December 14, Chamberlin school was joined by Kate Ash of Senator Leah's office and Secretary of Education, Rebecca Holcombe to celebrate this award.  

Following student reflections on a week filled with coding activities,  South Burlington Superintendent, David Young, presented the $10,000 prize to the school to Principal Holly Rouelle, Tech Integrationist, Kristen Courcelle, and Librarian, Caliope Flickinger.




Click the video below to watch the complete award ceremony captured by Google Hangout.




During the week, student coders at Chamberlin received helped with their coding efforts from Peter Drescher (Agency of Education), Eric Hall (Dealer.com), Lucie deLaBruere (Vita-Learn IGNITE), and Kristen Courcelle (South Burlington Schools) completing activities from CODE.ORG, Google's CS-First, Scratch from M.I.T., and Makey Makey.




The Hour of Code is a campaign to prove that regardless of age, race or gender, anyone
can learn how to not just consume, but build the technologies of the future.


Hour of Code Video

View the video made with a sampling of the photos taken last week in the Williston schools!