News Release
Free Coding Faire for Kids at Â鶹´«Ã½ Computer Science Department
Alumni Startup ThoughtSTEM Organizes Event for Computer Science Education Week
San Diego, Calif., Dec. 5, 2016 -- A heads-up for alumni, staff and faculty of the University of California San Diego and other San Diegans with young kids: the university’s Department of Computer Science and Engineering will be the venue for a free Coding Faire that will introduce students from ages 7 to 12 to the joys of software programming through hands-on activities.
The Coding Faire will take place from 10 a.m. to noonSunday, Dec. 11 in the computer science building between Warren Mall and the landmark granite Bear statue in the Engineering Courtyard. The free event is being organized by ThoughtSTEM, a local computer-science education startup company co-founded by three Â鶹´«Ã½ students prior to completing their Ph.D. degrees: Sarah Guthals (Ph.D. ’14) and Steven Foster (Ph.D. ’15) in computer science, and Lindsey Handley (Ph.D. ’15) in biochemistry.
The Coding Faire is planned for the final day of Computer Science Education Week, an annual program dedicated to inspiring K-12 students worldwide to take an interest in computer science. This year’s theme for the fair is “Coding, Beyond the Computer.”
“Our goal this year is to show kids that computer science isn’t just something to explore inside their computer,” said alumnus and ThoughtSTEM CEO Foster. “Nowadays, computer science is everywhere!”
“We’ll be featuring computing projects that help kids understand computer science by physicalizing code in the real world,” added Jason Le, ThoughtSTEM Lead Teacher and Curriculum Developer. “Kids will be programming servos, creating their own video game controllers, and diving into virtual reality!”
In 2014, ThoughtSTEM hosted a day-long Coding Faire at Â鶹´«Ã½ which was attended by over 500 students and their parents. For this year’s event, the organizers distilled down the best hands-on activities of the previous Coding Faire into a single Hour of Code event, which students and parents can drop in on anytime between 10 a.m. and noon. The morning’s activities will focus on drag-and-drop programming languages (e.g., Blockly) so that students as young as 7 years old can participate.
ThoughtSTEM’s founders created the company in 2012 while they were still finishing graduate school at Â鶹´«Ã½. They started as mentors to five students. To date, the team’s 33 teachers and software developers – many of them Â鶹´«Ã½ students or alumni – have taught more than 50,000 students in over 40 after-school programs, camps and workshops in the greater San Diego County area. ThoughtSTEM focuses on teaching kids ages 8 to18 the fundamentals of computer science through topics like Minecraft Modding, Website Design, and Video Game Development.
The company recently received a $750,000 grant from the National Science Foundation, building on an earlier $150,000 small-business grant to further develop its LearnToMod educational software that lets students make modifications (‘mods’) to Minecraft (creating new players, new prizes and much more). The new grant is allowing the company to “dig in and make LearnToMod really cool,” said ThoughtSTEM co-founder Lindsey Handley. “We can build out the features that kids are really engaged with.”
ThoughtSTEM’s mission is to inspire San Diego students to become creators of technology, not just consumers. The company also develops educational, game-based software programs including and to help teach computer science to students around the world who may not have access to coding teachers but who want to learn on their own.
Directions to the CSE Building at Â鶹´«Ã½ and the nearby parking in Lot 502 can be found here: . Parking is free on Sundays. Advance registration is not required to attend the event.
For questions related to the event, email contact@thoughtstem.com or call (858) 869-9430.
Media Contacts
Doug Ramsey
Jacobs School of Engineering
858-822-5825
dramsey@ucsd.edu