324
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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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There have already been a bunch of great answers, but for an absolute beginner, I would wholeheartedly recommend Hackety Hack. It was created by the unreasonably prolific why_the_lucky_stiff specifically to provide a BASIC/LOGO/Pascal-like environment for new programmers to experiment in. It's essentially a slick Ruby IDE with some great libraries (flash video, IM, web server) and interactive lessons. It makes a good pitch for programming, as it chose lessons that do fun, useful things. "Hello, world" may not impress right off the bat, but creating a custom IM client in 20 minutes can inspire someone to keep learning. Have fun!

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Copy some simple code line by line and get them to read and interpret it as they go along. They will soon work it out. I started programming on an Acorn Electron with snippets of code from Acorn magazines. I had no idea about programming when I was 6, I used to copy the text, but gradually I learnt what the different words meant.

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This may sound dumb, but why are YOU trying to teach your brother to program?

Often the best learning environment consists of an goal that can be achieved by a keen beginner (a sample program), an ample supply of resources (google/tutorials/books), and a knowledgeable source of advice that can provide guidance when needed.

You can definitely help with suggestions for the first two, but the last is your primary role.

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Plenty of things tripped me up in the beginning, but none more than simple mechanics. Concepts, I took to immediately. But miss a closing brace? Easy to do, and often hard to debug, in a non-trivial program.

So, my humble advice is: don't understimate the basics (like good typing). It sounds remedial, and even silly, but it saved me so much grief early in my learning process when I stumbled upon the simple technique of typing the complete "skeleton" of a code structure and then just filling it in.

For an "if" statement in Python, start with:

if  :

In C/C++/C#/Java:

if () 
{

}

In Pascal/Delphi:

If () Then
Begin

End

Then, type between the opening and closing tokens. Once this becomes a solid habit, so you do it without thinking, more of the brain is freed up to do the fun stuff. Not a very flashy bit of advice to post, I admit, but one that I have personally seen do a lot of good!

Edit: [Justin Standard]

Thanks for your contribution, Wing. Related to what you said, one of the things I've tried to help my brother remember the syntax for python scoping, is that every time there's a colon, he needs to indent the next line, and any time he thinks he should indent, there better be a colon ending the previous line.

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How about this: Spawning the next generation of hackers by Nat Torkington.

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There is a book called Code. I can't remember who wrote it, but it goes through the basics of a lot of stuff that we (programmers) know and take for granted that people we talk to know also. Everything from how do you count binary to how processors work. It doesn't have anything dealing with programming languages in it (well from what I remember), but it is a pretty good primer. I will admit that I am also of the school that believes you have to know how the computer works to be able to effectively program things for it.

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Project Euler has a number of interesting mathematics problems that could provide great material for a beginning programmer to cut her teeth on. The problems begin easy and increase in difficulty and the web is full of sample solutions in various programming languages.

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I'd recommend Charles Petzold's book Code - The Hidden Langauge of Computer Hardware and Software as an excellent general introduction to how computers work.

There's a lot of information in the book (382 pages) and it may take an absolute beginner some time to read but it's well worth it. Petzold manages to explain many of the core concepts of computers and programming from simple codes, relays, memory, CPUs to operating systems & GUIs in a very clear and enjoyable way. It will provide any reader with a good sense of what's actually happening behind the scenes when they write code.

I certainly wish it was around when I was first learning to program!

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I don't know for sure what will be the best for your brother, but I know I started with python. I've been playing various games from a very early age and wanted to make my own, so my uncle introduced me to python with the pygame library. It has many tutorials and makes it all easy (WAY easier than openGL in my opinion). It is limited to 2d, but you should be starting out simple anyway.

My uncle recommended python because he was interested in it at the time, but I recommend it, now fairly knowledgeable, because it's easy to learn, intuitive (or as intuitive as a programming language can get), and simple (but certainly not simplistic).

I personally found basic programming simply to learn programming obscenely boring at the time, but picked up considerable enthusiasm as I went. I really wanted to be learning in order to build something, not just to learn it.

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Begin by asking him this question: "What kinds of things do you want to do with your computer?"

Then choose a set of activities that fit his answer, and choose a language that allows those things to be done. All the better if it's a simple (or simplifiable) scripting environment (e.g. Applescript, Ruby, any shell (Ksh, Bash, or even .bat files).

The reasons are:

  1. If he's interested in the results, he'll probably be more motivated than if you're having him count Fibonacci's rabbits.
  2. If he's getting results he likes, he'll probably think up variations on the activities you create.
  3. If you're teaching him, he's not pursuing a serious career (yet); there's always time to switch to "industrial strength" languages later.
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A good resource to teach young people is the free eBook "Invent your own games with Python":

http://pythonbook.coffeeghost.net/book1/IYOCGwP_book1.pdf

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If he is interested than I wouldn't worry about focusing on games or whatnot. I'd just grab that beginners 'teach yourself x' book you were about to throw and give it him and let him struggle through it. Maybe talk about it after and then do another and another. After then I'd pair program with him so he could learn how shallow and lame those books he read were. Then I'd start having him code something for himself. A website to track softball stats or whatever would engage him. For me it was a database for wine back in the day.

After that I would start in on the real books, domain design, etc.

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I skimmed through the comments and looks like nobody mentioned Foundations of Programming from www.CodeBetter.com. Although it requires a bit of foundation, it can certainly be a next step in the learning process.

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Once he has the basics, I suggest the Tower of Hanoi as a good exercise. I recommend beginning with the wooden toy if you have one; let him try to solve the problem by himself and describe his method in a systematic way. Show him where recursion comes into play. Explain him how the number of moves depends on the number of disks. Then let him write a program to print the sequence of moves, in your language of choice.

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Very good video introduction course by Stanford university (no prior knowledge required):

Programming Methodology

Will teach you good "methodologies" every programmer should know and some Java programming.

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Book: Java Programming for Kids, Parents and Grandparents (PDF)

I don't have personal experience about learning using that book, but it appears to be nice because it quickly goes into producing something visible, and not spending too much time with the syntactic itty bitty details. Has someone here tried using that book?

0
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once you've taught them how to program, they might want to learn how to develop software.. for that I think Greg Wilson's Software Carpentry course is great.. it also uses Python as the student's language.

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I think Python is a really great Language to start with: :-)

I suggest you to try http://www.pythonchallenge.com/

It is build like a small Adventure and every Solutions links you to a new nice Problem.

After soluting the Problem you get access to a nice Forum to talk about your Code and get to see what other people created.

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I can recommend my project, PythonTurtle.

Summary:

PythonTurtle strives to provide the lowest-threshold way to learn Python. Students command an interactive Python shell (similar to the IDLE development environment) and use Python functions to move a turtle displayed on the screen. An illustrated help screen introduces the student to the basics of Python programming while demonstrating how to move the turtle.

It looks like this:

alt text http://www.pythonturtle.com/screenshot.gif

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Try to find a copy of Why's (Poignant) Guide to Ruby online. The original site is offline but I'm sure there are a few mirrors out there. It's not your typical programming guide; it puts a unique (and funny) spin on learning a new language that might suit your friend. Not to mention, Ruby is a great language to learn with.

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Academic Earth offers links to free Computer Science courses from top universities. They have a section geared towards Beginning Computer Science. The languages taught in the beginning courses vary:

  • MIT - Introduction to Computer Science and Programming - Python
  • Stanford - Computer Science I: Programming Methodology - Java
  • Harvard - Introduction to Computer Science I - C (main focus), with a few others sprinkled in for good measure (e.g., SQL, PHP, LISP, Assembler, etc.)
  • Berkeley - a dialect of the LISP language
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I'd suggest taking an approach similiar to that of the book, Accelerated C++ in which they cover parts of C++ that are generally useful for making simple programs. For anyone new to programming I think having something to show for a little amount of effort is a good way to keep them interested. Once you have covered the fundamentals of Python then you should sit back and let him experiement with the language.

In one of my University subjects for this semester they have taken an approach called Problem Based Learning(PBL) in which they use lectures to stimulate students about different approaches to problems. Since your brother is keen you should take a similiar approach. Set him small projects to work on and let him figure it out for himself. Then once he is finished you can go through his approach and compare and contrast with different methods.

If you can give him just the right amount of help to steer him in the right direction then he should be fine. Providng him with some good websites and books would also be a good idea.

I'd also recommend sticking away from IDE's at the starting stages. Using the command line and a text editor will give him a greater understanding of the processes involved in compiling/assembling code.

I hope I've been of some help. :)

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Python is easy for new developers to learn. You don't get tangled up in the specifics of memory management and type definition. Dive Into Python is a good beginners guide to python programming. When my sister wanted to learn programing I pointed her to the "Head Start" line of books which she found very easy to read and understand. I find it's hard to just start teaching someone because you don't have a lexicon to use with them. First have him read a few books or tutorials and ask you for questions. From there you can assign projects and grade them. I find it hard to teach programming because I learned it over nearly 15 years of tinkering around.

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I would actually argue to pick a simpler language with fewer instructions. I personally learned on BASIC at home, as did Jeff. This way, you don't have to delve into more complicated issues like object oriented programming, or even procedures if you don't want to. Once he can handle simple control flow, then move on to something a little more complicated, but only simple features.

Maybe start with very simple programs that just add 2 numbers, and then grow to something that might require a branch, then maybe reading input and responding to it, then some kind of loop, and start combining them all together. Just start little and work your way up. Don't do any big projects until he can grasp the fundamentals (otherwise it may very well be too daunting and he could give up midway). Once he's mastered BASIC or whatever you choose, move on to something more complicated.

Just my $0.02

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I think the "wisdom of crowds" work here. How did most people learn how to program? Many claim that they did so by copying programs of others, usually games they wanted to play in BASIC.

Maybe that route will work with him too?

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I recommend starting them off with C/C++. I find that it is a good foundation for just about every other language. Also, the different versions of BASIC can be pretty dodgy, at best, and have no real correlation to actual programming.

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I think learning to program because you want to learn to program will never be as good as learning to program because you want to DO something. If you can find something that your brother is interested in making work because he wants to make it work, you can just leave him with Google and he'll do it. And he'll have you around to check he's going along the right path.

I think one of the biggest problems with teaching programming in the abstract is that it's not got a real-world context that the learner can get emotionally invested in. Programming is hard, and there has to be some real payoff to make it worth the effort of doing it. In my case, I'd done computer science at uni, learned Pascal and COBOL there, and learned BASIC at home before that, but I never really got anywhere with it until I became a self-employed web designer back in the 90s and my clients needed functionality on their web sites, and were willing to pay about 10x more for functionality than for design. Putting food on the table is a hell of a motivator!

So I learned Perl, then ASP/VBScript, then JavaScript, then Flash/ActionScript then PHP - all in order to make the stuff I wanted to happen.

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First off, I think there has already been some great answers, so I will try not to dupe too much.

  • Get them to write lots of code, keep them asking questions to keep the brain juices flowing.
  • I would say dont get bogged down with the really detailed information until they either run in to the implications of them, or they ask.

I think one of the biggest points I would ensure is that they understand the core concepts of a framework. I know you are working in Python (which I have no clue about) but for example, with ASP.NET getting people to understand the page/code behind model can be a real challenge, but its critical that they understand it. As an example, I recently had a question on a forum about "where do I put my data-access code, in the 'cs' file or the 'aspx' file".

So I would say, for the most part, let them guide the way, just be there to support them where needed, and prompt more questions to maintain interest. Just ensure they have the fundamentals down, and dont let them run before they can walk.

Good Luck!

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I would recommend in first teaching the very basics that are used in almost every language, but doing so without a language. Outline all the basic concepts If-Else If-Else, Loops, Classes, Variable Types, Structures, etc. Everything that is the foundation of most languages. Then move onto really understanding Boolean, comparisons and complex AND OR statements, to get the feeling on what the outcomes are for more complex statements.

By doing it this way he will understand the concepts of programming and have a much easier time stepping into languages, from there its just learning the intricate details of the languages, its functions, and syntax.

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My favourite "start learning to code" project is the Game Snakes or Tron because it allows you to start slow (variables to store the current "worm position", arrays to store the worm positions if the worm is longer than one "piece", loops to make the worm move, if/switch to allow the user to change the worm's direction, ...). It also allows to include more and more stuff into the project in the long run, e.g. object oriented programming (one worm is one object with the chance to have two worms at the same time) with inheritance (go from "Snakes" to "Tron" or the other way around, where the worm slightly changes behavior).

I'd suggest that you use Microsoft's XNA to start. In my experience starting to program is much more fun if you can see something on your screen, and XNA makes it really easy to get something moving on the screen. It's quite easy to do little changes and get another look, e.g. by changing colors, so he can see that his actions have an effect -> Impression of success. Success is fun, which is a great motivation to keep on learning.

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