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I didn't really get into programming until high school, although I wish my parents would have introduced me to it at a young age.

What are good ways to start getting kids excited about programming?

I've been looking into SmallBasic and KPL as possible starting languages but would like some suggestions.

If anyone has general advice or experience it would be appreciated.

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Let him be a kid. I wouldn't bother teaching him such a focused skill at this age. Teaching him to critically think via normal life experiences would be my goal. Let him remain a child for as long as he can. Let the boy play! :) If he was 12 or so and asking that would be a little different in my book. – klabranche Sep 2 '09 at 16:47
I posted my comment as an answer to add to the melee. :) – klabranche Sep 2 '09 at 16:59
Even a duplicate question gets 5 upvotes - very nice :-) – Vijay Dev Sep 2 '09 at 17:34
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I was writing (very) simple games in QBasic when I was in 4th grade (along with a few other friends in my class), so I don't think there's a need to wait until high school.

In retrospect, I feel that if there was an avenue to ask for help, I would have learned more and not be stuck in BASIC and not knowing basic data structures like array (!) for a couple years.

When I started out programming, I didn't have an internet connection, nor anyone to ask for help. There were no programming courses offered (my first formal programming course was in college!), so if there were a place or person to ask questions, I feel that I would have been able to learn more. Someone who can offer guidance for where to find information would have been really helpful.

I feel that a good age isn't really that high. Elementary school students can certainly get started with programming. There's no need to introduce the ideas of variables until they learn it in middle school. (I'm sure we all have taken exams where we had to solve for x in5 * x = 35, where x was a box rather than a letter, when we were learning multiplication.)

I guess my advice is, be there when a child needs help. Steer them toward directions where they can learn more about a topic. Buy them a book. Read together. Help out when they're stuck. Give them a hand, but teach them to seek information on their own.

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I don't think it a good idea to push a child into a direction.Why get it started with programming if the kid might be a good mathematician, engineer, musician, artist, writer?!

So the best way to get your kid passionate about programming is IMHO just to be attentive if it likes tinkering with the computer and asks you questions. A computer will be around, given these ages. And you better should be around ;)

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I don't agree, there are so many things that I wish my parents would have pushed me toward. I understand where your coming from and I don't want to impose my will on my kids but on the flip side sometimes kids need a nudge... – Matt Davison Jan 27 '09 at 3:21
Learning the basics of programming makes no different than learning the basics of math. – Zippoxer Jul 6 '11 at 15:10
Yeah, and like learning an instrument or to dance or to speak to an audience - all necessary skills today and tomorrow. You both suffer from the "if only"-syndrome. If you are a role model than your kid will most certainly be passionate about something - help it choose its passions and don't force them on it. – Leonidas Jul 6 '11 at 19:56
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Posted my comment as an answer.

Let him be a kid. I wouldn't bother teaching him such a focused skill at this age. Teaching him to critically think via normal life experiences would be my goal. Let him remain a child for as long as he can. Let the boy play! :) If he was 12 or so and asking that would be a little different in my book.

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+1. Your comment beat my similar answer by a couple of minutes. I need to type faster. – Rob Allen Sep 2 '09 at 17:29
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I don't know if you want to "teach" programming as much as expose your son. :) He's young, so maybe he'll like it, but maybe he won't.

If you do want to, though, a great place to start is the Alice project. It's designed pretty much for this specific purpose. It provides an interactive world that your child can easily write software for in a java-y way. It provides a way for your son to tell stories via code, and that's something that every child I've ever met has loved doing. (Tell stories, I mean, not write code. :) )

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+1. I also agree to the "expose" part. Show him Alice, and see if he likes it. If he likes it, support him, but never push him. – Vilx- Sep 2 '09 at 16:46
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I'd consider it a low priority.

Not until after they've been bitten with the reading bug. I'd say that anything that detracts from reading is a negative.

The industry is moving so quickly that the stuff they learn early is likely to be outdated by the time they get to college and career.

Better to learn how to think first, last and always. Programming is easy by comparison.

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Develop a relationship with them. When they express an interest, enable them.

Neither of my kids care a whit about programming. Computers -- to them -- are just tools. My son is a musician because that's what he likes. He's willing to put up with intermittent employment. My daughter went to the Olympics (in food service) because that interested her. I wouldn't have suggested either thing. Instead, I seem to have empowered them to make their own choces.

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Exactly. That's what I call "good parenting." Nicely done, nicely written. – duffymo Jan 27 '09 at 2:05
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I guess he should first study mathematics and then go into programming

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+1 definitely agree. – Vijay Dev Sep 2 '09 at 16:47
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I've been thinking about this too (our eldest son is 5). I would be tempted to start with Logo (and indeed that's what I started with). It has instant feedback and gets some of the ideas of programming without too much other stuff getting in the way.

There are also various education-inspired languages you might want to check out - I believe Squeak was originally meant for kids, for example. I wouldn't personally start off with mainstream languages such as Java/C#/Scala etc though - there's a lot of stuff which gets in the way of the whole "instant gratification" part. I'm pretty sure my son at least would get bored with just text fairly quickly...

In terms of books, you might want to check out Hello World! which is specifically aimed at kids. (I must read my review copy some time... a colleague recommends it though :)

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No! My answer's been Jon Skeet'd! ;) – Greg D Sep 2 '09 at 16:48
I was about to suggest Logo too. Maybe with a robotic turtle to draw patterns over your carpet. That'd make it more fun. – pjp Sep 2 '09 at 16:51
Logo link softronix.com/logo.html – pjp Sep 2 '09 at 16:58
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Check out these related questions:

What’s the best way to teach young kids some basic programming concepts?

Suggestions on starting a child programming.

From those posts:

I realize your question is more of WHEN rather than HOW, but based on prior community feedback, I'd say as soon as you think your kid can handle Legos (3? 2?), start planting the programming seed.

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This question is scary. Encourage them to read more, if anything. Or do some sports. If my parents tried to teach me to program I'd probably hate it today.

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There's c# for sharp kids, and the article of the link recommend starting at 10 years or higher. But you could give it a try a little earlier if he's that smart...

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Buy him and Xbox360 and get Kudo from the IndieGames Channel. Or give him Lego Mindstorms (has a nice GUI to create simple programs with). Another idea is the RPG Maker Series - this got me on fire (but again, you really need to be able to read).

However, 9 seems to be a more reasonable age for this. And I wouldn't even try to go with real programming languages.

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I want to play with Lego Mindstorms – pjp Sep 2 '09 at 16:49
Lego Mindstorms is a great Idea IMO. It's a great toy, and you can seee if your son likes the idea os solving problems without too much hassle. Buying a couple of kits you can try to create great robot battles between you two! – GmonC Sep 2 '09 at 16:50
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I think it is important that a child forges their own path; as many of us can agree, not everyone starts out an engineer. I think being attentive to your child's interests will help you gauge when they are ready to take it to the next level. Many good introductory languages/reading material has already been posted to help guide; but if all else fails, you can always let Microsoft answer that question =]

http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/beginner/bb308754.aspx

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I wouldn't let Microsoft educating my kids too much, but I guess that's a matter of opinion... – user54579 Jan 27 '09 at 2:12
Haha of course dropping the only microsoft link led to a negative score =] This points to another thing we should teach our children; broaden your horizons and be open minded. Shutting the door on a technology is only limiting the potential domain your child is exposed to (and possible jobs)... – user59194 Jan 27 '09 at 2:36
Exactly, and I doubt that Microsoft is the best choice to teach open-mindedness to your children :) – user54579 Jan 27 '09 at 3:43
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Its probably worth getting him excited about the end-goal, eg a website, rather than than the means to get there, then the rest should come naturally, it will be up to him where, how or if he progreses on from that.

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It's a kid! He wont take the time to do a "project" per se :) How many times do we read about people who abandon their homeprojects as it's not that fun after the initial stages. A few if's and a printf will either hook him if he's into programming or not if he dislikes it. – cwap Sep 2 '09 at 16:49
Sure, I mean a website for a kid, eg: It could a be a single page with a picture of himself and his friends that can be seen by his friends. What kind of "project" were you thinking of? – Mark Redman Sep 2 '09 at 16:53
Even that is huge in the eyes of a six-year old with an attentionspan that's broken if he finds some old candy on the floor :) My point is that end goals are not something kids are interested in. They want something right here, right now - Not tomorrow. Aaand they aren't really interesting in visualizing "how great my personal homepage will be" :) – cwap Sep 2 '09 at 17:10
BTW; sorry if I came off harsh, that certainly wasn't my intention :) – cwap Sep 2 '09 at 17:11
I agree on the attention span bit, an ddo mean a small goals :-) but a one pager could be quite a small task, ie adding one image and some text. No offence taken by the way. I think I may be exclamation mark sensitive. – Mark Redman Sep 2 '09 at 17:22
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I was about 8 when I first picked up a BASIC book and wrote this on my Commodore 64:

10 PRINT "Dean is a dork"
20 GOTO 10

Dean is, of course, the name of my younger brother. From there I just kept adding stuff to see what I could do. By 14 I had a 2D spaceship game with support for two joysticks, sound, multicolored sprites, and collision detection.

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Hmm this will just encourage him to ask why goto doesn't work in Java in a couple of years time. – pjp Sep 2 '09 at 17:10
right because the first thing I asked in Java was where is malloc? ::roll eyes:: – Neil N Sep 2 '09 at 18:01
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I think its most likely too early to introduce programming, per se. Just think of all the people who pressured their kids to study the violin only to have the kid hate it (and them) by the time they can appreciate such a skill.

It may work better if you start by encouraging him to ask lots of questions about how things work in the world around him. Get him used to trouble shooting and working out complex or abstract ideas on his own. Establish the basics of trial and error hypothesis testing.

Then when he is a bit older you can see if he enjoys bringing those skills to programming.

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I think I had an electronics set at that age. It was fun making my own battery less am radio. – pjp Sep 2 '09 at 16:54
I had a specialized building set call Robotics where you built a structure and added motors to it that were controlled via a wired, numbered panel. I have a Mindstorms set now for when my 5-month-old gets bigger. But I really don't want him to hate code because I forced it on him too soon. – Rob Allen Sep 2 '09 at 16:58
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Programming is a tool. If your kids are smart they can learn it at 10 as well as at 25 without any major difficulty. Your goal must be to get them smart, more than to get them to do the coding. If you manage to show them that they can do cool and useful stuff using programming, the sooner - the better. as said 5th grade is a good time to start hackin' around.

The main idea must still be to show them as much different paths as possible so that they can choose their own knowingly. Maybe he's better at theoretical physics than object oriented programming - or maybe he's an artist.

Do not push or influence them to follow your path, even if you feel proud that they want to "be like daddy". You cant imagine how many bad programmers this educational mistake will produce in the coming years.

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If he's interested he's old enough. Small Basic has been designed to be a modern introductory language.

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My first programming language was COMAL, which was created in part for teaching purposes. I think I was about eight years old.

Today, I guess as a language I would recommend Python. It has very little overhead before you can actually do stuff, and you don't have to stick to a certain programming paradigm. A "hello world" is a no-brainer, and you can go to all possible directions from there.

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I found the Kids explaining Python interesting to watch (German spoken, english translation). Don't know exactly how old they are but they seem to have fun with it and it may be a good start to get someone the same age into it (well as a good parent you would never force you child into it - no matter how smart he might happen to be).

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I like the idea of modelling4all, which is a website that allows to define behaviors of ants (or other 'agents') and then simulate those ants, share behaviors with other users etc. See if this is fun for him, but don't push too hard.

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Personally, I think you should get them to start with at least basic concepts as early as 5th grade. By that time they probably know how to browse and maybe e-mail. As soon as they are fluent navigating the computer interface and the web, get 'em programming

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I’ve been teaching Scratch and Alice to as young as 3rd graders, and they do quite well. They love it, in fact. Many show an interest in learning more mainstream languages so we do Python and Pygame.

Dave Briccetti

http://davebsoft.com

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I think that if the trick is to first of all get your kids to learn how to read and write early, preferably before they make it to first grade (is that when kids in the US start learning? or maybe preschool).

I think that once they're able to understand that and some basic math/geometry, you could teach them about Logo (there are lots of free implementations) or maybe play with educational programming systems like Alice.

I learned Logo when I was 7 and survived :)

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Teaching him a functional programming language like Haskell would be very good especially if he excels in Maths.

Usually, I would recommend Visual Basic to new programmers. However, programmers who have VB (VB6 not .NET) as their first language tend to (NOT ALWAYS) write sloppier code than those with Java or c# as their first langauge, insofar what I have witnessed.

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Haskell? Why not throw in some Cobol and x86 assembler too? He's six! – Paul Dixon Sep 2 '09 at 16:49
Haskell for 6 year old? WTF? – epitka Sep 2 '09 at 16:49
loll... he did mention "a very smart son". Teaching Haskell would lead to a greater understanding of logic/Mathematics in Programming resulting in efficient programs. – waqasahmed Sep 2 '09 at 16:51
Forget Haskell, go straight to BrainF***. – Mark Rushakoff Sep 2 '09 at 16:52
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Even if he was the lovechild of Donald Knuth and Edsger Dijkstra, I wouldn't do that to him! :) – Paul Dixon Sep 2 '09 at 16:55
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My suggestion: Try to find an old Lucas Learning game called "Pit Droids". It's a puzzle game that is, I think, an excellent introduction to mathematical and computational thinking, and it's a lot of fun.

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  1. If to teach a kid programming? Sure if s/he wants to learn.
  2. When to teach a kid programming? As early as s/he understands the idea of following instructions like a cooking recipe, and enjoys it.
  3. Will a kid want to learn programming? Getting rarer because now a computer does so much without the user programming it.

When I was 7, computers filled a room, 4-function calculators cost $7K, and I enjoyed the idea of getting a computer to add up lots of numbers and make larger numbers. So I started programming. I wanted to learn. Now because of #3 above, the barrier to interest is much, much higher.

I would add one thing to S. Lott's answer "Develop a relationship with them. When they express an interest, enable them". That would be that what you as a parent are excited about, and share with your kids, they may get interested in. If that happens, great. If it doesn't, check what they are excited about and learn from them. That's what's so great about parenting.

Guess the question was about parenting not programming ;-)

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I wouldn't force a child into learning programming. If he/she shows interest then sure, but I think you're better off having him work on his reading and math skills. Those skills will serve him well regardless of his eventual career choice. Maybe find some educational games that he likes so he can have fun and learn at the same time.

Programming isn't THAT hard to pick up. I learned how to program in C when I was 18 years old and I seriously doubt that i'd be any better now if I started earlier. If I could change anything about my upbringing though I would definitely have had my parents spend more time with me on the basics: math, reading, science.

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