Bill Gates and Mark Zuckerberg better look out.
Because here comes Sidney Robinson, a 13-year-old from Moreno Valley, California.
“I want to be an innovator,” Sidney told his local Press-Enterprise newspaper. “I want to do something unique, something
they haven’t done yet.”
Sidney took a first step towards reaching his goal by attending a New Zealand-organised Code Avengers Code Camp on the
9th and 10th July at North Ridge Elementary School in Fair Oaks, California.
He was one of 33 students, ranging from fourth (9 yr) to ninth (13 yr) graders, who learned basic skills of web
programming such as HTML, CSS, JavaScript coding and web design from University of Waikato PhD student Michael Walmsley
using his unique codeavengers.com website.
“The coding skills help them get started to build their own websites, mobile apps, games and other web projects,” he
says.
“They’re not going to become expert programmers in a two-day code camp, but we want them to experience IT things so they
get enthused and say, ‘Hey! I really love creating websites’ or, ‘Hey! Making games, that’s really fun for me’.”
He says the camp also enables kids to meet friends with similar interests.
“Potentially, when one of these kids goes to create the next Facebook, they know who to contact to be their next
partner.”
Walmsley, from Hamilton, met North Ridge fifth-grade teacher David Coopersmith through a mutual friend and asked if he
wanted to host a Code Avengers Code Camp while Walmsley was in the US, attending a Computer Science teacher conference
in Boston.
Coopersmith says codeavengers.com proved an instant success.
“On the first day I put my 8 to 11 year-old absolute beginner programmers on codeavengers.com and they took off and
never looked back,” he says.
“The interactive lessons keep them engaged and they’re able to help each other when they get stuck. I’m also using Code
Avengers to train fellow teachers, who will be helping me teach web development next year.”
Walmsley says the website gives students a great start and provides teacher with tools to assess and encourage students.
Currently only 1 in 10 American schools teach students how to code, meaning a million of the best jobs in America are
not available to many of the 3.6 million high school students that graduate each year.
New chief executive of Code Avengers, Stephen Hopkins, says Code Camps are being rolled out internationally as part of
the company’s global marketing strategy.
“Our goal is to be the number one site for the total beginner. Code Avengers is now used by over 600 schools and
growing, in more than 30 countries around the world. University business schools are also catching on, with the
University of Auckland purchasing a site licence to teach the basics of web development and JavaScript programming to
their 2500 first year business students.”
Walmsley, an online language learning expert, leads the development team and says they are committed to increasing the
breadth of online lessons to include other popular coding languages, such as Python and C++.
“We want to make learning to code fun and effective for all ages,” he says.
Summer Code Avengers code camps are being planned in New Zealand to support the rolling out of the new NCEA digital
technology standards in web development and programming for secondary school students. For more information on dates for
New Zealand code camps, visit codeavengers.com.
ENDS