October 31, 2024
Education News Canada

MINDFUEL
Canadian Youth Are Turning to Coding as the New Language To Gain Critical Skills

February 9, 2021

With schools and parents opting for online learning as a safe alternative to in-classroom learning for their child's education, youth are picking up more tech-savvy skills. This includes the valuable skill of coding, with one nonprofit reporting an increase of more than 80 million hours of youth coding since the start of the pandemic in 2020 (Source: Code.org).

MindFuel, a pioneer nonprofit in the online learning space and STEM (science, tech, engineering & math) programming, recognizes coding as essential to many STEM and innovation careers today, which is why it created the Crack the Code Challenge, in partnership with RoboGarden,for Canadian youth through its signature coding platform, Codingville

With Canada projected to have a deficit of skilled STEM workers in the coming years, early engagement with youth to unlock their innovation and interest is critical. Thanks to support from AltaML as the national partner, and ATB Financial as the Alberta regional partner, MindFuel's Crack the Code Challenge is designed as a fun way to teach youth the foundational skills of coding, which have vast applications in future post-secondary journeys and careers.

"Coding is such a valuable skill with so many applications, but it is not covered in many of our national K-12 curriculums," says Cassy Weber, CEO of MindFuel. "Codingville gives students all the tools they need to learn the basics and even code their very own app or game. It's a great platform, and that's why we've launched the Crack the Code Challenge to inspire youth to get started and get coding."

  • The Crack the Code Challenge is open to Canadian youth ages six to 18 (excluding Quebec residents) currently enrolled in the Kindergarten to Grade 12 curriculum.
  • The first challenge, which ran from January 15 to February 5, has concluded. The second challenge runs February 8 to March 1, and the final challenge runs March 5 to March 26.
  • Participants will compete in one of three national age groups: six to eight years, nine to 13 years, and 14 to 18 years. Prizes will be awarded to the top three participants in each age group per round.
  • Each round has a designated theme to inspire participants' creativity. 

To register, participants simply create a free account with Codingville and then opt into the challenge they wish to participate in. From there they compete to earn points and rank on a national leaderboard by completing coding journeys, sharing their referral code and "liking" participant projects, and finally, developing their own app according to the challenge theme. 

Prizes will be awarded at the end of each challenge and include chromebooks, laptops & gaming laptops, and more. A panel of judges score the applications/games, which will be combined with the leaderboard points to determine the winners of each challenge. To view all rules and regulations, visit https://www.codingville.ca/crack-the-code.html.

Codingville is a $6M two-year project within the national CanCode initiative and provides three training journeys, each with up to 15 hours of coding and digital skills development training through self-paced, gamified, experiential activities for students. At the end of each journey, students can create and share their very own applications/games. In addition, Codingville has a teacher training module, and a quick tips tutorial for getting started in the classroom. To date, Codingville has introduced coding to more than 10,000 Canadian students.

To register for a free Codingville account as a student or teacher, visit www.codingville.ca. Registration for challenge two of Crack the Code Challenge is now open. 

For more information

MindFuel
Suite 260, 3512 33 Street NW
Calgary Alberta
Canada T2L 2A6
mindfuel.ca/