San Jose, California (Crohn) – The pre -school school in San Jose embraces the technology industry that South Bay is famous by teaching young students how to codinate.
Every one of the parents is looking for a pre -school program well to start their child in education. At Primrose Evergreen School in San Jose, it exceeds the curriculum.
Anna Yin is the director of Primose, where the school started a 11 -week experimental program to teach children between the ages of 3 and 4.
Yin said: “Therefore, when we do these lessons, you start with severe starting lessons, learn about patterns, perform sequences, finding rings for these patterns as well and adding repetition.”
It seems complicated for the child to understand, but the experimental program simplifies it with “Colby The Mouse”, a robot that these young people use to learn how to cord with the style using the buttons on top to get the mouse from point A to “Point Cheese”.
The owner of the Primose School, Mohit Patel, said that about 200 students will use the experimental program again this fall.
“It comes to how to make students solve problems, how critical thinking and how to raise the real problems they will face in the future,” Patel said.
Before these young technicians get coding, teachers will begin by making them pass through the mazes of themselves to understand the concept of following the pattern. Even when they graduate to use the mouse for coding, there are zero screens.
This was important for Batil, who has a background in coding, working in biology and computer science.
“They do not use iPad or any type of its computers, it is more related to using the basic skills about solving problems around which coding revolves,” Patel said.
Like all technology, there is an educational curve in the coding chapters in Primrose and everything is going as planned. But every mistake is an educational lesson and makes access to the correct result more sweet.