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Original Question

I am currently engaged in teaching my brother to program. He is a total beginner, but very smart. (And he actually wants to learn). I've noticed that some of our sessions have gotten bogged down in minor details, and I don't feel I've been very organized. (But the answers to this post have helped a lot.)

What can I do better to teach him effectively? Is there a logical order that I can use to run through concept by concept? Are there complexities I should avoid till later?

The language we are working with is Python, but advice in any language is welcome.


How to Help

If you have good ones please add the following in your answer:

  • Beginner Exercises and Project Ideas
  • Resources for teaching beginners
  • Screencasts / blog posts / free e-books
  • Print books that are good for beginners

Please describe the resource with a link to it so I can take a look. I want everyone to know that I have definitely been using some of these ideas. Your submissions will be aggregated in this post.


Online Resources for teaching beginners:


Recommended Print Books for teaching beginners

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  • I don't understand why this should be closed. At least 295 users have found this question (and the 92 answers) to be helpful enough to up-vote it, with 290 going so far as to consider it one of their favorites. The question resulted in a very useful aggregation of teaching resources. It hasn't really resulted in 'arguments' or 'debates', but really a lot of great advice about how to address one of the difficult 'human factors' in programming. I think closing a question like this is draconian and detrimental to the StackOverflow community. Sep 17, 2011 at 17:58
  • @JustinStandard Have you considered converting your edits to several of the answers to comments? E.g. here, here, and here Oct 18, 2011 at 14:14

86 Answers 86

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This thread is very useful to me as a beginner (>100 lines of code) programmer.

Based on what I have been through, once I finished with the "Hello World" and move to variables and "if/else" statement, I got zapped with too much syntax; not knowing what to do with them.

So with an interesting simple project, I might get my interest up again. There are quite alot of project suggestions here.

Can I ask a questions here?

Is it better to learn a scripting language like Autohotkey first?

Edit: [Justin Standard]

I think learning something macro-based like Autohotkey will only help minimally. Try learning a "real" programming language first. The easiest to get started with (according to most people) are python and ruby. I favor python, but both are pretty simple. There is also a full stackoverflow post that answers the question of which language to start with.

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In my biased opinion, C is the best point to start. The language is small, it's high level features are ubiquitous and the low level features let you learn the machine.

I found the C Primer Plus, 5th Edition very helpful as a beginning programmer with almost no programming experience. It assumes no prior programming experience, fun to read and covers C in depth (including the latest C99 standard).

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For me, exploring and experimenting within the IDE itself helped me to learn Java and Visual Basic, but I learnt the basics of programming the hard way: Perl 5. There wasn't a free IDE back then, so it meant typing codes into Notepad, saving it, and then run the perl interpreter.

I'd say that IDEs make learning the basics of programming easier. Try playing around with control structures and variables first. Say in Java:

int a = 5;

for (int i = 0; i < a; i++) {
     System.out.println("i is now " + i);
}

Basically, simply learning the control structures and variables would allow a beginner to start coding fun stuff already.

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The best way to learn anything is to start with the basic. You can find any good text book to explain what programming is, memory, algorithms.

The next step select the language which it just depends on what the teacher knows or why the student wants to learn.

Then it is just code, code, code. Code every example right from the book. Then change it slightly to do another action. Learning to program is an active process not a passive one. You can't just read C++ How to Program by Dietal and then expect to code C++ without having actively done it while reading.

Even if you are an experienced coder it helps to write the code in the book to learn something new.

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Something to consider ... not everyone is capable of programming:

Some people just cannot get past things like:

A = 1

B = 2

A = B

(these people will still think A = 1)

Jeff has talked about this too. In fact, my example is in the link (and explained, to boot).

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It may seem weird, but I got started writing code by automating the tasks and data analysis at my former job. This was accomplished by recording then studying the code an Excel macro generated. Of course this approach assumes you can learn via VB.

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Some additional information that someone could attach to Jason Pratt's earlier post on Alice ... specifically, a Storytelling Alice variant.

Although the study presented targets middle school girls, you may find the white paper written by Caitlin Kelleher interesting.

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One I used with my kids is CEEBot. It's not python, but it teaches C / Java style programming in a fun, robot-programming kind of game. It is aimed at 10-15 year olds, but it is a really good one.

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Having small, obtainable goals is one of the greatest ways to learn any skill. Programming is no different. Python is a great language to start with because it is easy to learn, clean and can still do advanced things. Python is only limited by your imagination.

One way to really get someone interested is to give them small projects that they can do in an hour or so. When I originally started learning python I playing Code Golf. They have many small challenges that will help teach the basics of programming. I would recommend just trying to solve one of the challenges a day and then playing with the concepts learned. You've got to make learning to program fun or the interest will be lost very quickly.

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As a non-programmer myself, I found the book "How to Program" from Pragmatic Programmers very helpful from a rudimentary standpoint. It's approachable and easy to read for a beginner. It won't take you from beginner to expert, but it will prepare you for what to do once you pick a language and pick up your first "Learn to Program in (language here)" book.

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A couple of other starting platforms:

  • A good programmable calculator (that's what I learnt on back in the 70s), and HP25 then HP41, now TI69, etc.
  • Interactive Fiction platforms, like "Inform 7" provide another angle on the whole thing
  • Flash/ActionScript

All of these are different and engaging, and any one of these might spark the kind of interest that is required to get a beginner of and running.

LBB

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I'd recommend Think Python.

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Your question quite depends on age and education of your brother, but if he is a child/teenager, I would recommend to do some GUI programming or graphic programming first (with Canvas etc.). It looks good, and you have immediate results. Algorithms are boring, and too abstract for young people (before say 15 years old).

When I started programming on ZX Spectrum (I was like 12 years old), I liked to draw various things on the screen, and it was still interesting. I didn't learn about real algorithmic techniques until I was maybe 18. Don't be mislead that such "simple" programming is a wrong start; the interest of the person learning it is the most important part of it.

So, I would look into PyKDE, PyGTK, PyQt or Python + OpenGL (there are certainly some tutorials on the net, I know of some Czech ones but that won't help you :)).

Of course, if your brother is older and has education close to mathematics, you can head directly to algorithms and such.

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Whatever language and environment you choose, if the student wants to learn for professional reasons or to do "real" programming (whatever that is), have them start by writing their starter programs1 on paper and taking them away to run. Come back with the output and/or error results and have them fix things on paper.

This isn't especially harder at first than doing it on-screen and hitting run, but it will make things much easier when they start to discover the wonderful world of bugs.

1) short, "Hello, World!"-type programs that still have some logic and/or calculations, do this up to a few programs that can have bugs

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Whatever they write, have them step through it in a debugger line-by-line on the first run. Let them see for themselves what the computer is doing. This takes a lot of mystery out of things, reduces intimidation ("oh, each line really is that simple!"), and helps them learn debugging skills and recognize why common errors are common (and why they're errors)

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+1 to Stanford university lectures. http://see.stanford.edu/see/courseinfo.aspx?coll=824a47e1-135f-4508-a5aa-866adcae1111

They're simple, of high quality and I can vouch for their ability to teach beginners(me being one of them).

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At first I was interested in how different programs worked, so I started by looking at the source code. Then when I began to understand how the program worked, I would change certain parameters to see what would happen. So basically I learned how to read before I learned how to write. Which coincidently is how most people learn English.

So if I was trying to teach someone how to program I would give them a small program to try to read and understand how it works, and have them just just play around with the source code.

Only then would I give them "assignments" to try to accomplish.

Now if they had a particular reason for wanting to learn how to program, it would certainly be a good idea to start with something along the lines of what they want to accomplish. For example if they wanted to be proficient in an application like blender, it would definably be a good idea to start with Alice.

I would absolutely recommend sticking with a language that has garbage collection, like D, Perl, or some interpreted language like javascript. It might be a good idea to stay away from Perl until Perl 6 is closer to completion, because it fixes some of the difficulties of reading and understanding Perl.

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I suggest "Computer Science Unplugged" as a complementary didactical material.

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"Who's Afraid of C++" By Heller

Might be worth a shot

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  • careful - that 'shot' might blow your leg off, according to Stroustrup!
    – DaveDev
    Dec 11, 2010 at 10:44
  • I actually meant that as a joke, but for reference: "C makes it easy to shoot yourself in the foot; C++ makes it harder, but when you do it blows your whole leg off" www2.research.att.com/~bs/bs_faq.html#really-say-that
    – DaveDev
    Dec 12, 2010 at 14:34
  • Oh, I thought you meant he said something specific about that book.
    – Tim
    Dec 12, 2010 at 15:33
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Microsoft Small Basic is a free .NET based programming environment aimed to be a "fun" learning environment for beginners. The language is a subset of VB.NET and even contains a "Turtle" object familiar from the Logo language. The website contains a step-by-step tutorial.

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I agree with superjoe30 above, but I don't have enough reputation yet to leave a comment.

I was a C.S. professor for 4 years. The languages were Basic, and then Pascal, but it doesn't really matter what the language is.

The biggest lesson I learned as a new prof was, no matter how simple I thought a concept was, it is not simple to a newbie. Never go any faster than your student can go. I can't emphasize that enough. Go really, really slow.

I would start with very simple stuff, read and print, maybe a simple calculation, just to get the student used to putting something in and getting something out. Then IF statements. Then really simple FOR loops, always in terms of something the student could write and have some fun with.

Then I would spend about 3 weeks teaching a very simple sort of machine language for a phony decimal machine called SIMPL, that you could single-step. The reason for doing this so the student could see where the "rubber meets the road", that computers do things step-by-step, and it makes a difference what order things happen in. Without that, students tend to think the computer can sort of read their mind and do everything all at once.

Then back to Basic. A couple weeks on arrays, because that is a big speed bump. Then sequential files, which is another speed bump. What I mean by "speed bump" is the student can be sailing along feeling quite confident, and then you hit them with a concept like arrays, and they are totally lost again, until you ease them through it.

Then, with those skills under their belts, I would have them pick a term project, because that is what makes programming interesting. Without a use for it, it's really boring. I would suggest a variety of projects, such as games, accounting programs, science programs, etc. It's really great to see them get turned on. Often they would ask me for help, and that's great, because you know they're learning.

While they were doing their projects, we would continue to cover more advanced programming techniques - searching, sorting, merging, how to make a simple database, etc.

Good luck. Teaching is hard work but satisfying when you see students grow.

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I agree with Leac. I actually play with Scratch sometimes if I'm bored. It's a pretty fun visual way of looking at code.

How it works is, they give you a bunch of "blocks" (these look like legos) which you can stack. And by stacking these blocks, and interacting with the canvas (where you put your sprites, graphics), you can create games, movies, slideshows... it's really interesting.

When it's complete you can upload it right to the Scratch websites, which is a youtube-ish portal for Scratch applications. Not only that, but you can download any submission on the website, and learn from or extend other Scratch applications.

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Use real world analogy and imaginary characters to teach them programming. Like when I teach people about variables and control statements etc.

Usually I start with calculator example. I say imagine u have a box for every variable and u have 10 card boards with numbers 0 - 9 printed on them. Say that the box can hold one cardboard at a time and similar ways to explain how programming elements work

And emphasis on how every operator works.. like the simple '=' operator always computes the right hand side first into one value. and put that value into box named "num_1" (which is variable name)

This has been very very effective, as they are able to imagine the flow very quickly.

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Ask your brother if there's something he'd like to make a program do or invent a project for him that you think would interest him.

Something where he can know what the output is supposed to be and point him to the materials(on-line or in print) pertinent to the project. If he's coming into python or programming 'cold' be patient as he works his way through understanding the basics such as syntax, errors, scoping and be prepared to step aside and let him run and make his own mistakes when you start to see the light bulb go on over his head.

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I highly recommend Python Programming: An Introduction to Computer Science 2nd Edition by John Zelle. It is geared towards beginners, and deals with the semantics of programming. After reading you will be able to pick up other languages much faster because of Zelle's semantic vs. syntactic approach. Check it out!

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My personal experience started back in elementary using Logo Writer (which in a way has evolved into Scratch), granted I was a little kid and computers where not as awesome as they are nowadays, but for the time being it took me places I hadn't been before... I think that's how I got hooked in the business... I could say that it was these first impressions based on such simplicity and coolness that made the goods that stick into my head for life. That's how basics in teaching programming should be taught... a simple process that yearns magic.

Back to my first CS 101, I started with notions of what an algorithm was by building a Tequila Sunrise (a step by step process that could be repeated at any time with the right ingredients, that will result in the same output), from there we move on to basic math functions using Scheme (like EHaskins was saying... start small and then build up), and from there to notions of loops, Boolean logic, structures and then building into concepts of objects and some simulation executions...

One of the good things about this approach is that language was not a goal but just a tool in the process of learning the concepts and basics of programming (just like operators, functions and else are in mathematics).

IMHO learning the basics of programming and creating a foundation is probably the best thing you could teach your brother, once the goal is covered then u can move on into a more general use language like python and teach them higher concepts like architecture and design patterns (make them natural in the process so he will get use to good practices from early stages and will see them as part of the process)... we are far from reinventing the warm water, but we always have to start by creating fire.

From there on the sky is the limit!

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