Should My Kids Learn to Code?

Should My Kids Learn to Code?

A recent article in The New York Times paints a fascinating picture of college prep hitting the playground, with first graders visiting college campuses, making diagrams of what classes they want to attend and filling mock applications to ensure that the class of 2030 is college-ready.

Indeed, the ‘college admissions’ frenzy is now kicking off as early as elementary school. Guided college tours or writing mock personal essays represent great opportunities to inspire children to think about their future. But are we, both parents and teachers, on the right track to ‘future proof’ our young ones? Are we equipping them with the right skills to succeed in life – with or without a college degree?

Advances in technology constantly shape the economy and our role in it. In the next decade, we need to prepare our children, the future workforce, for a world where smart machines are predicted to destroy many of our existing jobs and for “skill intensive” jobs that don’t exist today.

Growing voices are advocating for stronger emphasis on STEM skills (Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics) for these will prepare our children to be “creative entrepreneurs” while machines take care of the more mundane tasks.

So what does this mean?

Should my kids focus more on math and science? Do they absolutely need to learn to code? Should they join a Sudoku club instead of football?

Sure they should! Not only to boost their STEM skills, but also to hone their ‘soft-skills’ because future workers and leaders will have to be innovative, decisive and empathetic.

Gaming, coding, making will drive them to think independently and creatively, spot and solve problems, innovate constantly and lead teams in an increasingly interconnected ecosystem – in short, the scope of skills that will be expected of the future workforce.

As we continue to teach our young ones to read, write, count – and eventually code, we can no longer afford to ignore the 4Cs: creativity, cooperation, communication and critical thinking.

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Carla Aerts

Reinventing Education through innovation. EdTech and AI in learning. International executive, innovator and expert, policy, thought leader, influencer, speaker, design, transform. Learning scientist. Mentor & coach

9y

The answer is: 'Yes, but coding and STEM alone is not going to equip them with them with the 4Cs. It should be integrated into a balanced education that helps unleash their potential in the 4Cs; that includes non-STEM too.' 4Cs is critical for 21st century learning.

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Jasmine Sylvère

Conseillère senior en promotion et publicité passionnée du marketing et des communications

9y

The answer is yes they should.

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Chris Milnes

Business Development Manager at JKP Metal Packaging Solutions

9y

No - encourage your kids to get outside and mix with groups of their peers in stimulating, exciting and energetic groups. There's plenty of time later in life to be a boring, insular coder!

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George Sterpu

Deep Learning & AI specialist | PhD in Multimodal Speech Processing

9y

In my opinion, there is nothing challenging in studying a programming language. It's a nice skill to have, but can be picked up at later stages. In contrast, games and sports could have a significantly stronger impact upon children, and I can list: teamwork, reflexes, competitive spirit, intuition, fast decisions, strategies, winning, losing etc.

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