Chinese teacher who’s helping 30,000 children learn computer coding skills

Teachers and learning, Technology and education

Authorities are investing heavily to get schools and students capable of聽succeeding in the digital economy.聽


For 22 years, Xu Xinyan has taught computer skills and computer science to young Chinese students.

Now she is on the front lines of China国产视频檚 national push to educate the next generation in coding skills essential to excel in the new economy.

With a Microsoft China Education partner, she is going to bring the KODU innovative curriculum to more than 150 schools and 200 IT instructors reaching 30,000 students, through forums, training sessions and video recordings.

China sees artificial intelligence and robotics as future engines of the Chinese economy and crucial areas of industrial growth. Authorities are investing heavily to build China国产视频檚 domestic capabilities in computer science.

It国产视频檚 a visionary plan that aims to make China the world leader in artificial intelligence by 2030, building a homegrown industry worth nearly $150 billion.聽

The plan calls for China to 国产视频渋mprove the AI education system, strengthen the construction of a talent pool and echelons, (and) especially accelerate the introduction of the world国产视频檚 top talent and young talent, forming China国产视频檚 AI top talent base.国产视频澛


Committed educators like Xu are crucial to this vision. She聽got her exposure to computers while young. As the daughter of an instructor in ship modelling at Beijing国产视频檚 Museum of Science and Technology, Xu was selected to join a pilot programme to test children国产视频檚 interest and aptitude.

She says: 国产视频淚 started to play. Though I wasn国产视频檛 very proficient, I became very interested.国产视频

Xu graduated from college with a degree in Chinese language and literature – but returned to university when she discovered that what local schools needed were computer science teachers.

For 20 years, she refined her teaching as students progressed from lacking home computers to having tablets and smartphones in the classroom.

Creating a course that suited all backgrounds wasn国产视频檛 easy – out of a class of 40 students, she recalls, less than five could complete the more technically demanding tasks she asked of them in QBasic, a text-based programming language.

国产视频淚t is too difficult and uninteresting for children. If a statement had an error in one place, the whole statement was wrong and it would produce error messages and frustration,国产视频 she says.

In 2016, she had a breakthrough. She began using Kodu – a 3D, visual programming language designed to introduce children to coding concepts in an intuitive manner. Without needing to type text, users can experiment with computational ideas such as loops, subroutines and branching.

Suddenly, students previously uninterested in computer science started to produce their own programmes with ease.

国产视频淭here were some girls, they weren国产视频檛 interested in coding but they used Kodu to do 3D animation,国产视频 said Xu. 国产视频淭hey made a little animated video to tell the story of a mermaid.国产视频 聽

国产视频淚 see programming as a means for children to express themselves, like writing, singing, dancing, and painting – it国产视频檚 a window to their inner feelings.国产视频

国产视频淔or younger grades, the rich colors and 3D graphics are appealing and the coding language is closely connected to natural language. This is very important for determining whether children can accept it easily and continue to love it.

国产视频淎lmost every school in our school district has downloaded KODU, so I am planning to organise a competition this semester in our school district, during this year国产视频檚 ‘Hour of Code’ week.聽

I see programming as a means for children to express themselves, like writing, singing, dancing, and painting. Xu Xinyan

“We also have a 10-class STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics) training. I am planning to apply a half-day in the training session to train more than 110 Information Technology teachers how to use KODU in combination with computational thinking.国产视频澛

In addition, at a November forum that will be attended by education researchers and teachers from all school districts in Beijing, Xu will give a KODU Scene Experience Lesson.

Fitting her dual background in the humanities and sciences, she advocates a cross-disciplinary approach to computer science education that brings in content from varied fields – geography, art, mathematics, history.

Youth can gain coding, computer science and computational thinking education through KODU and Xu believes that such skills can fundamentally broaden and transform students国产视频 thought patterns.聽

In fact, she argues that computational thinking should not just be offered in computer science class but that teachers of other subjects should also master it and incorporate it in their subject teaching.聽

国产视频淔or example, music teachers can explore how to 国产视频榩rogramme国产视频 music with students, then the art teacher can turn the music to drawings with students. That国产视频檚 what we are trying to do next.国产视频


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