Is Your Child Coding Yet? New Building Blocks Teach Programming Basics
Children can use plastic Osmo Coding blocks to command a cute character on an iPad screen
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A mirror attaches to your iPad so that its camera can see the Osmo coding blocks your child arranges. |
Toy
When the first Osmo kits
From the start, Osmo’s lineup included sets of numbers, letters and the colorful Chinese geometric tiles known as tangrams
In a math game, players position numbers to win exotic fish. With letters, they play a Hangman
But all along, the developers of Osmo
Awbie started out as a robot, but the developers realized that robots tend to skew a bit masculine, so they morphed Awbie into a delightfully gender-neutral character. “Girls think it’s a girl and boys think it’s a boy,” says Pramod Sharma, co-founder and CEO of Tangible Play
As children build out their scripts, tiles light up on screen, showing a preview of Awbie’s movements. Tweak the code, and the preview changes with it. While most pieces are straightforward, there’s a more advanced piece meant for conditional situations. For instance, if, while walking forward six squares, Awbie hits a bush before finishing, it can be instructed to jump over the obstacle.
Once children begin moving up levels, they collect rainbow-colored strawberries, beaver-guarded tree stumps and other commodities to build up their campsite. They end up with bigger tents, crazier campfires and a corral where, eventually, their prize pets can live.
So that’s it: Buy your child this game and they’ll soon get a job at Google
Mr. Sharma, 35, would know: Having grown up in a rural part of India a three-hour drive from New Delhi, he learned both coding and English only when he got to college. Now in the U.S. and an eight-year veteran of Google, Mr. Sharma is providing his children with a different kind of upbringing. His 6-year-old daughter is chief product tester for the company. (His 2-year-old son isn’t quite ready for Osmo
Mr. Sharma left Google to cofound Tangible Play
There’s another reason products like Lego are so well-respected: They’re open-ended. Children may follow instructions to build a spaceship or shopping mall, but they also use the pieces to design their own vehicles and buildings.
Scratch—which starts with a blank backdrop, a main character and an abundance of code commands to string together—takes a lot more time to get oriented, and is recommended for ages 8 and up, rather than Osmo’s 6-and-up age group. Nevertheless, with over 15 million shared projects, Scratch is a proven way for students to program wildly imaginative games and videos.
To Mr. Sharma, coding “is a journey, and we want to focus on the early journey.” He does plan to add features that give children more creative input with the game. There’s already a purple “magic” block that players can use to grow flowers all over Awbie’s world. The flowers stay in place when children return to each spot. In the future, children could edit the game scenes even more.
It would be hard for a parent to mistake Osmo Coding
source: www.wsj.com