Home Invites Blogs Careers Chat Events Forums Groups Members News Photos Polls Singles Videos
Home > Blogs > Post Content

Learning with Scratch (915 hits)

http://info.scratch.mit.edu/sites/infoscra...

Scratch is a new programming environment developed by the Lifelong Kindergarten research group at the MIT Media Lab

http://scratch.mit.edu

Scratch supports the development of 21st Century Learning Skills, as described by the Partnership for the 21st Century

http://www.21stcenturyskills.org

The report Learning for the 21st Century identifies nine types of learning skills, divided into three key areas. This handout highlights the ways Scratch supports the development of these 21st Century learning skills.

Information and Media Literacy Skills

By working on Scratch projects, students learn to select, create, and manage multiple forms of media, including text, images, animation, and audio recordings. As students gain experience creating with media, they become more perceptive and critical in analyzing the media they see in the world around them.

Communication Skills

Effective communication in today’s world requires more than the ability to read and write text. Scratch engages young people in choosing, manipulating, and integrating a variety of media in order to express themselves creatively and persuasively.

Critical Thinking and Systems Thinking

As they learn to program in Scratch, young people become engaged in critical reasoning and systems thinking. In order to build projects, students need to coordinate the timing and interactions between multiple “sprites” (programmable moving objects). The ability to program interactive input provides students direct experience with sensing, feedback, and other fundamental systems concepts.

Problem Identification, Formulation & Solution

Scratch supports problem finding and solving in a meaningful design context. Creating a Scratch project requires thinking of an idea, then figuring out how to break the problem into steps and implement them using Scratch programming blocks. Scratch is designed to be “tinkerable”: students can dynamically change pieces of code and immediately see the results (e.g., doubling a number to see how it changes a graphic effect). Throughout the design process, students engage in experimenting and iterative problem-solving.

Creativity and Intellectual Curiosity

Scratch encourages creative thinking, an increasingly important skill in today’s rapidly changing world. Scratch involves young people in seeking innovative solutions to unexpected problems—not just learning how to solve a predefined problem, but being prepared to come up with new solutions as new challenges arise.

Interpersonal and Collaborative Skills

Because Scratch programs are built of graphical blocks, the programming code is more readable and shareable than other programming languages. The visual objects and modular code supports collaboration, enabling students to work together on projects and exchange objects and code.

Self-Direction

Taking an idea and figuring out how to program it in Scratch requires persistence and practice. When young people work on project ideas they find personally meaningful, their ideas provide internal motivation for overcoming challenges and frustrations
encountered in the design and problem-solving process.

Accountability and Adaptability

When students create Scratch projects, they have an audience in mind, and need to think about how other people will react and respond to their projects. Since Scratch projects are easy to change and revise, students can modify their projects based on feedback from others.

Social Responsibility

Because Scratch programs are shareable, students can use Scratch to provoke discussion of important issues with other members of their immediate learning environment, as well as with the wider international Scratch community.

References

Partnership for 21st Century Skills (2003). Learning for the 21st Century.

http://www.21stcenturyskills.org/downloads...

Resnick, M. (2002). Rethinking Learning in the Digital Age. In The Global Information Technology Report: Readiness for the Networked World, edited by G. Kirkman. Oxford University Press.

http://llk.media.mit.edu/papers/mres-wef.p...

Resnick, M., Rusk, N., Kafai, Y., Maloney, J., et al (2003). A Networked, Media -Rich Programming Environment to Enhance Technological Fluency at After-School Centers in Economically-Disadvantaged Communities. Proposal to the National Science Foundation (project funded 2003-2007).

http://www.media.mit.edu/~mres/papers/scra...

The Scratch project has received financial support from the National Science Foundation (Grant No. 0325828), Intel Foundation, and MIT Media Lab research consortia.

By Natalie Rusk, Mitchel Resnick, and John Maloney
Lifelong Kindergarten Group
MIT Media Laboratory

http://llk.media.mit.edu
Posted By: Adam Fate
Sunday, November 14th 2010 at 3:03PM
You can also click here to view all posts by this author...

Report obscenity | post comment
Share |
Please Login To Post Comments...
Email:
Password:

 
American Libraries (July 2008): Minds At Play

http://web.media.mit.edu/~mres/scratch/Ame...


Sunday, November 14th 2010 at 4:36PM
Adam Fate
Maloney, J., Peppler, K., Kafai, Y., Resnick, M., and Rusk, N. (2008). Programming by Choice: Urban Youth Learning Programming with Scratch.

ABSTRACT

This paper describes Scratch, a visual, block-based programming language designed to facilitate media manipulation for novice programmers. We report on the Scratch programming experiences of urban youth ages 8-18 at a Computer Clubhouse—an after school center—over an 18-month period. Our analyses of 536 Scratch projects collected during this time documents the learning of key programming concepts even in the absence of instructional interventions or experienced mentors. We discuss the motivations of urban youth who choose to program in Scratch rather than using one of the many other software packages available to them and the implications for introducing programming at after school settings in underserved communities.

http://www.media.mit.edu/~mres/papers/sigc...


Sunday, November 14th 2010 at 4:52PM
Adam Fate
Open source but closed development (saw that somewhere on their site). I haven't tried it out yet, one of my TODOs.
Sunday, November 14th 2010 at 10:29PM
Adam Fate
Please Login To Post Comments...
Email:
Password:

 
More From This Author
Separation of Powers During the Forty- Fourth Presidency and Beyond
Unaccompanied Alien Children: An Overview
Improper Disclosure of Non-Public Information
This is antithetical to the core values of the FBI and the Department of Justice
Based on these findings, the report concluded:
FBI Agent Peter Strzok in Text to Lisa Page: ‘We’ll Stop’ Trump from Becoming President
Kim Kardashian West opens up about 'mission' to free Alice Johnson in exclusive interview
Your guns are on the ballot this November.
Forward This Blog Entry!
Blogs Home

(Advertise Here)
Who's Online
>> more | invite 
Black America Resources
100 Black Men of America
www.100blackmen.org

Black America's Political Action Committee (BAMPAC)
www.bampac.org

Black America Study
www.blackamericastudy.com

Black America Web
www.blackamericaweb.com

CNN Black In America Special
www.cnn.com/blackinamerica

NUL State of Black America Report
www.nul.org

Most Popular Bloggers
agnes levine has logged 24937 blog subscribers!
reginald culpepper has logged 11958 blog subscribers!
miisrael bride has logged 8141 blog subscribers!
tanisha grant has logged 5210 blog subscribers!
rickey johnson has logged 4385 blog subscribers!
>> more | add 
Latest Jobs
Analyst, Service Desk with Front Range Community College in Longmont, CO.
Director of Health Services with Lawrence Academy in Groton, MA.
Professional Counselor- Apply by 2/2/2026 with State of Connecticut, Executive Branch in Montville, CT.
Environmental Trainee - 260115-0196ES-001 - Apply by 2/4/26 with State of Connecticut, Executive Branch in Hartford, CT, CT.
Customs and Border Protection Officer Recruitment Webinar – February 11th with U.S. Customs and Border Protection in Buffalo, NY.
>> more | add