Coding and Our Children

Coding

The only languages we were taught at school when I was growing up were French and German and if I’m being honest I only really remember hello, goodbye, how many brothers and sisters I have and all the swearwords.

My children however have a whole new world opened up to them and believe it or they are learning the language of the internet, they are learning to code! My eldest son is nine years old and has been using Scratch at school for a couple of years now as part of the school curriculum. He also attends Code Club at the local library once a fortnight where he continues to code (Python soon) and on top of this has started using Command Blocks to “code” in Minecraft.

All of these coding languages, all of these opportunities; we as parents think the fact that all of this is available to him is fantastic. It doesn’t hurt that we are all a bit geeky (in a good way) and enjoy this sort of thing.

Recently Kieran has been asking questions about secondary school (he has 18 months or so of primary school left!). After search the local “big” school for answers to certain questions we came across a news article about the schools coding club, Raspberry Pi. Some code they wrote as part of a competition was selected as a winner and sent up to the International Space Station, the team involved visited Tim Peake himself at a special event in his honour and had the good fortune to meet Professor Brian Cox and Dara O’Briain. To say that he thought this was cool is a huge understatement.

The point I’m trying to make is that our children have this fabulous opportunity to learn to code and if they wish literally go on and shape the internet, our digital devices, how things work and more. That is pretty amazing stuff.

Roy and I are very much behind this aspect of their learn and are keen to support it and help them go as far as they want and as far as they can. Personally I’ll have to do some reading up on coding as I still struggle with HTML but between us, the school, code club and all of the other resources available to them I see a very bright future for the boys and I can help but be excited by that.

Do your children enjoy coding? What do they do (Scratch, Python, Raspberry Pi?). Who knows, maybe some of this knowledge will rub off and this not-so code savvy Mum will be able to manage some basic programming at some point?

For The Love of Reading

Reading, book

As many of you already know I am a big reader. My prized possession as a young teen was the adult library card which enabled me to further explore the types of books not available to those restricted to the children’s section. A whole new world was opened up to me, from crime novels to shabby Mills & Boon romances the day I qualified for the grown up card and I was hooked.

As the years have gone on I’ve continued to read  constantly, something Roy and I both share. While I was a fan of Anne Mccaffrey for years before we met it was Roy who really opened up my eyes to the fantasy genre. Over the past seventeen years I’ve read every Dragonlance, Raymond Fiest and David Gemmell book written to mention just a few.

My thirst for genre discovery has continued to grow and while I still love the fantasy genre as a whole I’ve recently found myself looking towards autobiographies, fiction based on real life / historical events and overall quite involved books. I can absolutely recommend for example Not My Father’s Son by Alan Cummings and hope to soon be able to same the same of my current read, The Chalice by Nancy Bilyeau which I am struggling to put down (think dissolution of the monasteries, historical drama and necromancy etc).

When I went through my crime phase it was mostly Ed McBain and Patricia Cornwell that tickled my literacy-based fancy, along with a smattering of Sue Grafton (I’ve not made it past N is for Noose yet).

I’ve also enjoyed over the years and especially the past five years or so more easy reads, current ones, historical ones, “chit lit” ones and the like. Thank goodness for the library who has kept me very well stocked with everything from Danielle Steel to Rachael Lucas!

The only book-type I’ve never really explored fully is the horror section (other than a keen Stephen King obsession at one point). This is where I’m looking for recommendations. This list looks like a fabulous place to start but I’d also like to hear from those of you who have read some fabulous horrors and psychological thrillers and have specific titles to share.

If you have a must-read recommendation for me please share!