Google Doodle Celebrates 50 Years Of Kids Coding Languages: The First-Ever Coding Doodle Is A Lot Of Fun I This Google Doodle celebrating 50 years of kids coding is the first coding-doodle ever I Google’s FUN interactive doodle celebrates 50 years of kids coding languages
Google celebrates the 50 years since kids programming languages were introduced. and with its interactive doodle gives people a taste of coding in a very fun way. This doodle is the collaborative effort by three tech teams
For those of us who were born in the 1980’s, Computer Science as a subject may have sounded exciting when we were first introduced to the machines. But that excitement somehow drowned out because even in the early 90’s computer monitors at least here in India were still monochrome, expensive and added little value to our daily lives, not enough for us to even call them ‘practical’ in any way imagined.
Google Doodle. Coding for Carrots
But as with everything else and the dawn of the internet, things have changed quite a bit. Computers have now become smaller and personal and are even palm-sized in the form of smartphones with their own operating systems. So where do we go from here?
Well, today’s Google Doodle is a good reminder of how the past is not exactly the past and how we need to change the way we learn to prepare for the future. Code is all around us and it’s high time we started educating kids about the same.
With that today’s Google Doodle is all about helping kids learn to code, by breaking it down in the simplest way possible, using carrots and a furry (not to mention) hungry little rabbit.
Google’s first coding doodle ever, is fairly simple for an adult to understand, but also makes sense to kids to help them build the foundations of what they will learn in the near future.
Everyone knows that rabbits love carrots. So it easy to guess that your objective is to create an action using a code, one that can be easily completed by filling in the missing blocks to complete the action.
The doodle is a part of Computer Science Education Week where three teams have come together to create a Doodle that’s not only fun but helps kids learn to code as well.
Google Doodle. Coding for Carrots
Google’s Doodle team tied up with Google Blocky team and even some researchers from MIT Scratch to come up with this fun doodle.
Champika Fernando one of the MIT projects collaborators explains why they did it:
“My first experience with coding was in a free after-school program back in the eighties when I was nine years old. We programmed a little green turtle to move around and draw lines on a black screen."
That programming language was called Logo.
In the 1960’s, long before personal computers, Seymour Papert and researchers at MIT developed Logo — the first coding language designed for kids. With Logo, children could program the movements of a turtle, giving them the opportunity to explore ideas in math and science. Papert and his colleagues envisioned that computers could eventually be used by all children as a powerful tool for learning. They saw coding as a way for kids to develop confidence and fluency with a piece of powerful, modern, and one-day ubiquitous technology.
Google Doodle. Coding for Carrots
With today’s Doodle — the first coding Doodle ever — we celebrate fifty years of coding languages for kids by “Coding for Carrots.” In the interactive Doodle, you program and help a furry friend across 6 levels in a quest to gather its favourite food by snapping together coding blocks based on the Scratch programming language for kids.”
As Fernando explains, Scratch (the programming language) too was developed at MIT and comes from Seymour Papert’s ideas about kids and computers. It certainly does not appear as boring (it may have been exciting for those born in the 80's but not today) as Logo (which was perceived about 50 years ago) so it will be better at teaching kids how to code.
Google Doodle. Coding for Carrots
The director of communications at Scratch Team also said that computers are used in every aspect of our lives, “This week, millions of people around the world can and will have their first experience with coding. It makes me happy to think of all of the nine-year-olds who will get their first coding experience playing with today’s Doodle. My hope is that people will find this first experience appealing and engaging, and they’ll be encouraged to go further. In some ways, it’s very different from my first coding experience many years ago, but I hope it will be just as inspiring and influential for them.”
For kids today, the new Google Doodle and Scratch sure seems like a win-win.
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Google Doodle celebrates 50 Years of kids coding languages and computer science education week
NEW DELHI: Google Doodle sprang a fun surprise today with a carrot game. This unique doodle is Google's first-ever coding doodle to celebrate the computer science education week (CSEdWeek) and also mark 50 years of kids coding languages. A tweet by Google Doodles, said that it is Google's "VERY FIRST coding #GoogleDoodle" to mark golden-jubilee year of kids coding languages.
The interactive google doodle invites the user to collect carrots using code blocks and is called 'Coding for Carrots'. There are six levels in the game and before every level, there is a tutorial that helps the user learn the code block using kids coding language. In the game, a little bunny hops forward, makes a turn and collects all the carrots by snapping together coding blocks based on the Scratch programming language for kids. This doodle is a good way to take a break and fight off the Monday blues.
"This week, millions of people around the world can and will have their first experience with coding. It makes me happy to think of all of the nine-year-olds who will get their first coding experience playing with today's Doodle," said Champika Fernando, Director of Communications, Scratch Team.
Scratch Team is one of the three teams that worked on today's Google. The other two being the Google Doodle team and the Google Blockly team.
Computer Science Education Week (CSEdWeek) is an annual program dedicated to inspiring K-12 students to take interest in computer science. The annual programme is being held from December 4-10 this year. CSEdWeek is held in recognition of the birthday of computing pioneer Admiral Grace Murray Hopper and attempts to recognise the transformative role of computing.
The interactive google doodle invites the user to collect carrots using code blocks and is called 'Coding for Carrots'. There are six levels in the game and before every level, there is a tutorial that helps the user learn the code block using kids coding language. In the game, a little bunny hops forward, makes a turn and collects all the carrots by snapping together coding blocks based on the Scratch programming language for kids. This doodle is a good way to take a break and fight off the Monday blues.
"This week, millions of people around the world can and will have their first experience with coding. It makes me happy to think of all of the nine-year-olds who will get their first coding experience playing with today's Doodle," said Champika Fernando, Director of Communications, Scratch Team.
Scratch Team is one of the three teams that worked on today's Google. The other two being the Google Doodle team and the Google Blockly team.
Computer Science Education Week (CSEdWeek) is an annual program dedicated to inspiring K-12 students to take interest in computer science. The annual programme is being held from December 4-10 this year. CSEdWeek is held in recognition of the birthday of computing pioneer Admiral Grace Murray Hopper and attempts to recognise the transformative role of computing.


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