Breakfast Club Blog

Coding

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CODE

At CODE, there are plenty of free resources that provide information to teachers, volunteers, parents, etc. to learn about coding and how to teach it to students of all ages.

Coursera

Coursera is a large online course library where classes are taught by real university professors. Coursera also offers “Specializations,” which are collections of courses on a specific topic, typically with a capstone project at the end.

Dash

Dash is an online course that teaches the basics of web development.

freeCodeCamp

freeCodeCamp is an online interactive coding school that teaches coding through an established curriculum.

Edabit

Edabit offers bite-sized coding challenges that simulate what programming is like in the real world.

Khan Academy

Created by experts, Khan Academy’s library of trusted, standards-aligned practice and lessons covers math K-12 through early college, grammar, science, history, AP®, SAT®, and more. It’s all free for learners and teachers.

MITOPENCOURSEWARE

MIT offers up the curriculum that is taught in their classes and supportive materials and resources to use this curriculum to contribute to STEM teachings in the classroom.

SoloLearn

SoloLearn is an online platform where anyone can learn to code.

K12 Inc. Summer Camp

K12 Inc. Summer Camp offers tuition-free,  career-oriented summer courses in coding, video game design and programming, business and marketing, health care, and more—some of which will even earn students high school credit.

Girls Who Code

Girls Who Code knows that parents, educators, and girls are looking for support and connection during these challenging times. In response to the COVID-19 pandemic, which has led to school closures and significant disruption to daily life, Girls Who Code is making CS educational activities available for download free of charge, to anyone who wants to access them.

CSEd (Computer Science Education) Week

Computer Science Education (CSEd) Week is an annual opportunity to advocate for computer science education for youth as well as celebrate the contributions made by those in the field. This resource, sponsored by Google, provides simple resources leading up to the week to engage youth in Computer Science.