While learning the basics of computer science, students will create a winter wonderland, then share their artwork with friends!
Try the early preview now
Our Hour of Code tutorials will be translated into 30+ languages as soon as possible. If you can help, visit http://code.org/translate
20+ additional Hour of Code tutorials for all ages
New Hour of Code tutorials are ready to try – with options for every age, every device, and even “unplugged.”
3 weeks to go – 40,000 events worldwide and counting
The Hour of Code (Dec. 8-14) is 3 weeks away!
- Try early previews
- Choose an activity for your student’s Hour of Code
- Share your feedback us before final tutorials arrive on December 8
Please, keep spreading the word and help introduce 100 million students to foundational 21st-century skills.
Hadi Partovi, Code.org
https://studio.code.org/s/frozen/stage/1/puzzle/1
Next week, students in 57,000 classrooms around the world will learn their first Hour of Code, jumping into a field that can change the rest of their lives!
Double your impact: ask one other teacher to join
We’re on track to top last year’s Hour of Code to make this the largest learning event in history! But to reach our goal of 100,000 classrooms, we need your help! Please, ask one other teacher in your school to host an Hour of Code next week.
Here’s what you need to know now to make your Hour of Code a success:
1) Choose from final tutorials
Every Hour of Code tutorial is now ready. We’ve been adding more options and improving what’s available every day.
2) Use friendly urls
When you’re ready to start your Hour of Code, write an easy, œfriendly url on the board. Each tutorial has a short link. Instruct students to type it into their browsers to get started.
3) Watch inspiring video chats – celebrate computer science all week
Throughout the next week, Sheryl Sandberg, Bill Gates, Ashton Kutcher and more will chat with classrooms around the country. Tune into the live chats, or watch the video archives.
4) Help translate Code.org tutorials
Join our translation project and learn more about our translation process at code.org/translate.
Thanks for your support,
Hadi Partovi, Code.org