Tiny thinkers! A campaign to educate and empower parents to kickstart their child's computational thinking learning through everyday activities

Against the backdrop of Singapore’s commitment to achieving a Smart Nation, this paper explores how Computational Thinking (CT) learning can be made equally accessible to children aged four to seven across all family backgrounds. The paper will first make a case for the importance of Computational...

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Main Authors: Chen, Peijun, Lau, Germaine Leonora Jia Yin, Lau, Jermaine Ying Jie, Teo, Yisi
Other Authors: Christopher Cummings
Format: Final Year Project
Language:English
Published: 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10356/76616
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-766162019-12-10T14:37:39Z Tiny thinkers! A campaign to educate and empower parents to kickstart their child's computational thinking learning through everyday activities Chen, Peijun Lau, Germaine Leonora Jia Yin Lau, Jermaine Ying Jie Teo, Yisi Christopher Cummings Wee Kim Wee School of Communication and Information Sven Pfrommer DRNTU::Social sciences::Communication::Promotional communication::Communication campaigns Against the backdrop of Singapore’s commitment to achieving a Smart Nation, this paper explores how Computational Thinking (CT) learning can be made equally accessible to children aged four to seven across all family backgrounds. The paper will first make a case for the importance of Computational Thinking for young children and for the integration of CT learning into daily activities. As the pioneering project for the Digital Readiness component of Our Singapore Fund, Tiny Thinkers seeks to educate and empower parents with the necessary tools to kickstart their child’s journey in Computational Thinking. This early exposure places children in a better position to leverage further opportunities to learn CT at an older age. To assess the effectiveness of our education and empowerment efforts, the paper uses quantitative and qualitative research to analyse the effects of our activities on children. Our results demonstrated that accessible and comprehensible resources were effective in increasing behaviour adoption, which translated into significant CT knowledge gains in children. These results create new knowledge in the Computational Thinking field and contribute to the development of CT pedagogy in Singapore. Bachelor of Communication Studies 2019-03-29T06:48:15Z 2019-03-29T06:48:15Z 2019 Final Year Project (FYP) http://hdl.handle.net/10356/76616 en Nanyang Technological University 225 p. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
country Singapore
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic DRNTU::Social sciences::Communication::Promotional communication::Communication campaigns
spellingShingle DRNTU::Social sciences::Communication::Promotional communication::Communication campaigns
Chen, Peijun
Lau, Germaine Leonora Jia Yin
Lau, Jermaine Ying Jie
Teo, Yisi
Tiny thinkers! A campaign to educate and empower parents to kickstart their child's computational thinking learning through everyday activities
description Against the backdrop of Singapore’s commitment to achieving a Smart Nation, this paper explores how Computational Thinking (CT) learning can be made equally accessible to children aged four to seven across all family backgrounds. The paper will first make a case for the importance of Computational Thinking for young children and for the integration of CT learning into daily activities. As the pioneering project for the Digital Readiness component of Our Singapore Fund, Tiny Thinkers seeks to educate and empower parents with the necessary tools to kickstart their child’s journey in Computational Thinking. This early exposure places children in a better position to leverage further opportunities to learn CT at an older age. To assess the effectiveness of our education and empowerment efforts, the paper uses quantitative and qualitative research to analyse the effects of our activities on children. Our results demonstrated that accessible and comprehensible resources were effective in increasing behaviour adoption, which translated into significant CT knowledge gains in children. These results create new knowledge in the Computational Thinking field and contribute to the development of CT pedagogy in Singapore.
author2 Christopher Cummings
author_facet Christopher Cummings
Chen, Peijun
Lau, Germaine Leonora Jia Yin
Lau, Jermaine Ying Jie
Teo, Yisi
format Final Year Project
author Chen, Peijun
Lau, Germaine Leonora Jia Yin
Lau, Jermaine Ying Jie
Teo, Yisi
author_sort Chen, Peijun
title Tiny thinkers! A campaign to educate and empower parents to kickstart their child's computational thinking learning through everyday activities
title_short Tiny thinkers! A campaign to educate and empower parents to kickstart their child's computational thinking learning through everyday activities
title_full Tiny thinkers! A campaign to educate and empower parents to kickstart their child's computational thinking learning through everyday activities
title_fullStr Tiny thinkers! A campaign to educate and empower parents to kickstart their child's computational thinking learning through everyday activities
title_full_unstemmed Tiny thinkers! A campaign to educate and empower parents to kickstart their child's computational thinking learning through everyday activities
title_sort tiny thinkers! a campaign to educate and empower parents to kickstart their child's computational thinking learning through everyday activities
publishDate 2019
url http://hdl.handle.net/10356/76616
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