Is this asking WHY try to teach children programming?
 
A possible answer would be that it does something which has a positive
transfer to other areas - and that there is no evidence that it does, or
 
It produces better commercial programmers whne they grow up - again no
evidence
 
I'm not sure where the Latin comes in, unless the suggestion is that
trying to handle challenging natural language structures enhances the
ability to deal with formal language constructs such as a computer
program? There is evidence that bilingual or multilingual children on
average do better educationally than others.

________________________________

From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf
Of Ruven E Brooks
Sent: 31 July 2007 16:30
To: discuss@ppig.org
Subject: RE: PPIG discuss: teaching kids to program



Can anyone point me to any research results that show that teaching kids
to program has any transfer to other areas? 
Last I followed this kind of thing, the results were negative - teaching
programming doesn't have any more of 
a beneficial effect on, say, mathematics than time spent directly on
math. 

Can anyone point me to any research that shows that kids who learn
programming are better at it than those who 
learn it later, after you control for personality/apptitude effects? 

Last, but not least, what is the effect of learning Latin on learning to
program?   

Ruven Brooks 





"Guzdial, Mark" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 
Sent by: [EMAIL PROTECTED] 

07/31/2007 09:52 AM 

To
"Enda Dunican" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, discuss@ppig.org 
cc
Subject
RE: PPIG discuss: teaching kids to program

        




We're seeing a lot of use of both Alice and the new MIT Scratch with
children.  We're successfully using Python for media computation with
children as young as 11 years old. 
  
Mark 
  

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