Monday, July 6, 2026
ADVT 
National

Coding On Deck For Grade-school Students As B.C. Unveils New Curriculum

The Canadian Press, 19 Jan, 2016 12:16 PM
    VANCOUVER — Students in British Columbia's public elementary schools are on track to become the first generation to get basic training in computer coding as the province answers a call from its thriving tech sector.
     
    Some children in grades six to nine will begin learning the ABCs of digital technology once the government adds coding to teachers' lesson plans in its modernized curriculum.
     
    Schools will receive the new curriculum in September and the program is slated to be phased in over three years. The goal is to expose all kindergarten to Grade 12 students to coding basics within the next decade.
     
    Premier Christy Clark announced the plan Monday among several initiatives to address a shortage of workers with digital skills that are needed by B.C. tech firms in the government's bid to bolster the knowledge economy.
     
    "You've told us ... you need more talent. We know that's crucial for your success," Clark told about 2,800 delegates at the BCTech Summit.
     
    "Tech companies will locate in places where they can find the people that will be capable of doing the work. We need to start that in our schools."
     
    Specific details, including costs to implement the curriculum changes, weren't revealed as the program remains under development. Government officials said teachers will be given the opportunity to learn about coding during professional development days.
     
    The officials said they looked to jurisdictions including Ontario and Britain as examples in designing the policy, but noted there's no place that's implemented coding long enough to know its results.
     
     
     
    So far, the province has spent $500,000 running five coding academies over the past year for post-secondary students and has committed to expanding those camps into the next fiscal year. It also supported a program that ran nearly 700 events called Hour of Code.
     
    Jeremy Shaki, CEO of Lighthouse Labs, which has held free coding boot camps for thousands of citizens, said he would have loved to see the new curriculum delivered last year, but is thrilled by recent progress.
     
    "A lot of people have been banging this door for a couple years now," said Shaki. "By putting it out there, it means they'll have to develop it."
     
    New Brunswick and Nova Scotia have made similar commitments to coding over the past two years, while the United Kingdom made coding a mandatory part of school curriculum in 2014.
     
    New York City announced last fall that all of its public schools will be required to offer computer science to all students, and Chicago is working on a similar initiative.
     
    Melody Ma, a Vancouver web-developer who convinced the government to participate in the Hour of Code, said revising B.C.'s curriculum is great but she has concerns.
     
    "What are the resources on the back-end to actually support this? We haven't heard what those plans are. How are we actually going to make this happen? Not every child in school has access to a computer," she said.
     
     
    The disparity in resources around the province became clear when Ma helped put on a free coding event at an older high school in Prince George, B.C. Some 100 participating students had to learn offline when they ran out of Internet bandwidth.
     
    Tech firm CEO Alexandra Greenhill is a mother of three girls, ages five to 13, who believes the potential of an entire generation will be undermined if coding is not made a core part of the education system.
     
    She believes savvy policy will find ways, such as implementing a simple card game she invented called "Little Codr" that teaches kids to think like computers.
     
    "We don't teach you language for you to become a poet or English professor," she said. "I don't want my kids to automatically become coders. I want them to know enough about this so they're not intimidated and they can choose to embrace it if they want to."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    No Halfway House Reprieve For Elery Long Who Murdered B.C. Police Officer 31 Years Ago

    No Halfway House Reprieve For Elery Long Who Murdered B.C. Police Officer 31 Years Ago
    Elery Long, 70, has a pension and can afford reasonable housing, the Parole Board of Canada said in a recent decision.

    No Halfway House Reprieve For Elery Long Who Murdered B.C. Police Officer 31 Years Ago

    Police Continue Search Of Nova Scotia Property In Student Homicide Case

    Police Continue Search Of Nova Scotia Property In Student Homicide Case
    LOWER TRURO, N.S. — Police are continuing their search of a property near Truro, N.S., as they investigate the murder of a young physics student in Halifax.

    Police Continue Search Of Nova Scotia Property In Student Homicide Case

    Family Says Rock Narrowly Missed Boy After Crashing Through Roof During Blasting

    Family Says Rock Narrowly Missed Boy After Crashing Through Roof During Blasting
    Officials with Emera are investigating after a rock reportedly crashed through a family's home during blasting operations in western Newfoundland, nearly hitting a teenage boy.

    Family Says Rock Narrowly Missed Boy After Crashing Through Roof During Blasting

    Chairman Of UBC Board John Montalbano To Leave Post Temporarily During Investigation

    Chairman Of UBC Board John Montalbano To Leave Post Temporarily During Investigation
    Faculty members had been calling for his resignation since UBC president Arvind Gupta quit earlier this month.

    Chairman Of UBC Board John Montalbano To Leave Post Temporarily During Investigation

    Canadians Get Better At Making Consumer Debt Payments On Time: TransUnion

    Canadians Get Better At Making Consumer Debt Payments On Time: TransUnion
    TORONTO — Credit monitoring agency TransUnion says Canadians appear to be getting better at handling consumer debt.

    Canadians Get Better At Making Consumer Debt Payments On Time: TransUnion

    Worse Than Beijing And New Delhi: Smoke Haze From U.S. Fires Making Life Difficult For Calgarians

    Worse Than Beijing And New Delhi: Smoke Haze From U.S. Fires Making Life Difficult For Calgarians
     A Calgary air quality official says smoke from wildfires in the northwestern United States has made the quality of air in the city worse than in Beijing and New Delhi.

    Worse Than Beijing And New Delhi: Smoke Haze From U.S. Fires Making Life Difficult For Calgarians