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Preview of Thanksgiving Themed Unplugged Coding for Beginners Freebie

Thanksgiving Themed Unplugged Coding for Beginners Freebie

These screen free Thanksgiving themed coding activities are great for beginners to learn the basics of directional coding and computational thinking. There are 7 different ready to print activities that have students follow directional codes and create their own program using arrows. Use these activities as a STEM center or for independent work as an introduction to coding. These activities are a great way for students to participate in the Hour of Code™ and beyond without using technology
Preview of Unplugged Coding Floor Cards – Hearts | Valentine’s Day Free Printable

Unplugged Coding Floor Cards – Hearts | Valentine’s Day Free Printable

Created by
Alpaca EDU
This free unplugged coding resource includes floor coding cards designed for Pre-K and Kindergarten students. Students practice early coding skills by following and creating simple sequences without screens. The cards can be used on the floor for movement-based activities or printed smaller for table work as a hands-on coding puzzle. This resource supports: Unplugged coding and computational thinking Sequencing and logical thinking Early math skills Problem-solving and fine motor development
Preview of R U A CODE CRACKER? (REMEMBRANCE DAY)

R U A CODE CRACKER? (REMEMBRANCE DAY)

Here’s a poppy code for Remembrance Day for those who liked my first R U A CODE CRACKER? To recap: Dutch primary schools are using Montessori pegboards to introduce kids to coding work. The colours and numbers of the code reveal a pattern. Students must work the code, line by line, to build the surprise picture. My resident IT guru overrode my objection that calling this “coding” seemed a stretch as it looked more like a knitting or weaving pattern, “Well, the punch cards of the Jacquard loom we
Preview of R U A CODE CRACKER? (Halloween work)

R U A CODE CRACKER? (Halloween work)

Dutch primary schools are using Montessori pegboards to introduce kids to coding work. The colours and numbers of the code reveal a pattern. Students must work the code, line by line, to build the surprise picture. Since not every North American classroom has pegboards, I’ve reworked the principle as a “paper-and-pencil-crayon” activity for individuals or pairs. P.S. I protested to my resident IT guru that it seemed a stretch to call this “coding” as it looked more like a knitting or weaving pat
Preview of Edison Robot - Chicken Challenge

Edison Robot - Chicken Challenge

Created by
Heather Young
A fun, spring idea to integrate technology and life cycles! Students will design a barnyard and code their Edison Robot to move the chicks to the brooder.
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