André Roberge wrote: > bobdc wrote: >> I will be teaching an "Introduction to Programming" class to some >> middle school aged children and will be using Python, obviously. Does >> anyone have suggestions for simple little programs to create and >> analyze with them after I get past turtle graphics? >> >> Turtle graphics will be plenty for the first session, and I will leave >> time to ask them what they'd like to do in later sessions, but I was >> curious if anyone on the list has experience picking pedagogical >> programming examples appropriate for twelve-year-olds' attention spans. >> thanks, >> >> Bob >> > While it is not python per se, I suggest you have a look at GvR > (Guido van Robot) (The app is written in Python but is too complicated > for beginners). It is hosted on sourceforge (gvr.sourceforge.net). > It is a very interesting way (imho) to learn about programming, in > a pythonic way. > > (somewhat shameless plug follows:) > A 'more advanced version' of GvR which uses the full Python syntax > is RUR-PLE (rur-ple.sourceforge.net). The version currently hosted > there does NOT work under Linux (untested on Mac). > It uses wxPython 2.4 and will not work with 2.5. > An updated release that will work under both Linux and Windows, > and under both wxPython 2.4 and 2.5 will come out very soon, I hope. > > I'm working on it :-) I have two kids (ages 11 and 13) and plan to use > rur-ple to teach them about programming. Note that, even though > I plan it to be suitable for motivated children (with some guidance), > the end product (to be finished in a year?) is planned to be suitable > for a complete first-year university computer science. > > Andre Roberge
I started teaching my 11 year old first of all by doing silly stuff like -: for i in range(10): print "Silly me!" Moving on to more useful stuff like times tables (which they have to learn anyway). After times tables, I plan to work on a simple number guessing game where the computer picks a random number between 1 and 100 and asks the user to take a guess. This will help demonstrate many basic programming concepts. Not sure how to introduce graphics though as so much is relatively abstract. Adrian. -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list