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Bloomberg Businessweek

In an article for Bloomberg Businessweek about the best online activities to help kids engaged during the shutdowns caused by the Covid-19 pandemic, Arianne Cohen spotlights Scratch. Cohen writes that Scratch, “is a simple coding language designed by MIT that lets kids create animations, write stories, and play games while learning how to solve problems.”

Time

Google celebrated the 50th anniversary of Logo, the first programming language designed by the late Prof. Emeritus Seymour Papert, with an interactive Doodle called “Coding for Carrots,” writes Joseph Hincks of Time. “My hope is that people will find this first experience appealing and engaging, and they’ll be encouraged to go further,” says Champika Fernando, director of communications at Scratch.

USA Today

Brett Molina writes for USA Today about the Dec. 4th Google doodle, which celebrates 50 years of kids coding. The interactive doodle “honors the creation of Logo, a programming language developed in the 1960s by professor Seymour Papert and MIT researchers to teach kids how to code,” notes Molina.

AP- The Associated Press

Rodrique Ngowi writes for the Associated Press about ScratchJr, an app co-developed by MIT researchers to help young children think creatively and develop skills in math and science. “Children as young as 5 can use the app to craft their own interactive stories and games,” writes Ngowi. 

Forbes

“The MIT Media Lab recently released ScratchJr, a free iPad app that helps children 5-8 learn how to code,” writes Jordan Shapiro for Forbes. The ScratchJr language is a redesign of the original Scratch programming to simplify it for use by younger children.

Wired

Marcus Wohlsen of Wired reports on ScratchJr, a new iPad application created by MIT researchers to teach kids how to code. “We wanted to make sure young people aren’t just using tablet for browsing and consuming,” says Prof. Mitchel Resnick. 

The Guardian

“The Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) has released a new iPad app that aims to help 5-7 year-old children take their first steps in programming,” writes Stuart Dredge for The Guardian. “ScratchJr is a free app based on MIT’s existing Scratch programming language.”

New York Times

Nitasha Tiku of The New York Times interviews Dr. Natalie Rusk of the MIT Media Lab about how to interest young girls in coding. Rusk was one of the developers of Scratch, an open-source programming platform for children.