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Tom Woodward

Learning to Code is Non-Linear - Buffer Posts - Medium - 0 views

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    Certainly true for me in a variety of areas of learning . . . "Programming was taught to me in a similar way - and for students to attain true understanding, this doesn't feel like it's the best way to learn. There is a literal learning curve to programming, and once you hit the inflection point of that curve you become somewhat self reliant. You know what to ask Google, you know the process of debugging, and you start to realize you're capable of accomplishing anything by yourself. But if you haven't hit that point yet, it can feel like you may never hit that point. Traditional methods of testing and gauging progress among students who are at different points in their capacity to learn programming don't feel quite fair, and I believe this discourages many (particularly underrepresented minorities) from continuing to learn how to code."
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    Certainly true for me in a variety of areas of learning . . . "Programming was taught to me in a similar way - and for students to attain true understanding, this doesn't feel like it's the best way to learn. There is a literal learning curve to programming, and once you hit the inflection point of that curve you become somewhat self reliant. You know what to ask Google, you know the process of debugging, and you start to realize you're capable of accomplishing anything by yourself. But if you haven't hit that point yet, it can feel like you may never hit that point. Traditional methods of testing and gauging progress among students who are at different points in their capacity to learn programming don't feel quite fair, and I believe this discourages many (particularly underrepresented minorities) from continuing to learn how to code."
sanamuah

Could Storytelling Be the Secret Sauce to STEM Education? | MindShift | KQED News - 1 views

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    ""When you can call a line of code a spell, then you are getting somewhere," Fruchter said. After all, isn't computer code basically modern magic?"
Yin Wah Kreher

Color Hex Color Codes - 1 views

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    hexadecimal codes
Tom Woodward

woodwardtw (Tom Woodward) - 2 views

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    Here is where I'm storing various code based pieces that make things at VCU work.
sanamuah

The Problem With Putting All the World's Code in GitHub | WIRED - 1 views

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    "possible to follow the development of a particular piece of software and see how it all came together. That's made it an irreplaceable teaching tool."
Tom Woodward

An Infantryman Learns To Code - Inside DigitalOcean - Medium - 2 views

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    I wonder how often this opportunity is there but the person isn't . . . seems like the very definition of computational thinking. "In the end, the tool was very crude but accomplished something very useful: It had a flow that ensured all the reports required by people on the ground, and above, were sent in a timely and orderly manner. Each step of that flow was almost entirely automated. Each button filled a template and put the text in the clipboard for copy-pasting in the chat. Events were timed automatically. Distances and time of travel were computed automatically. A dropdown menu facilitated entering common values. Big warning signs were visible when a time critical step was ongoing, or some important data was missing."
Yin Wah Kreher

Maggie's Digital Content Farm - 3 views

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    The Web promised openness. Open access. Open knowledge. A wide open space for creativity. Collaboration. Distribution. Instead what we have today is a mass of information silos and content farms. What we have today, if we're honest with ourselves, are old hierarchies hard-coded onto new ones.
anonymous

quickQuote by times - 0 views

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    " a web application to select video quotes from a video, to embed in a article. it uses Spoken data API to generate a transcription of the video. The user can then search, and select a quote. This can be exported, and the application trims the video, and generates the HTML code to embed it with the corresponding part of the video associated as a dropdown."
Tom Woodward

Animate your way to glory - 1 views

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    "This article is significantly longer than previous installments. It features 4 interactive slideshows, each introducing a new tool as well as related concepts around it. In one way, it's just another math guide, but going much deeper. In another, it's a thesis on everything I know about animating. Their intersection is a handbook for anyone who wants to make things move with code, but I hope it's an interesting read even if that's not your goal."
Jonathan Becker

Nifty Assignments - 0 views

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    "The Nifty Assignments session at the annual SIGCSE meeting is all about gathering and distributing great assignment ideas and their materials. For each assignment, the web pages linked below describe the assignment and provides materials -- handouts, starter code, and so on."
Tom Woodward

On meta-design and algorithmic design systems - 0 views

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    " Design is how it works and sketching in code is the only natural way to prototype a dynamic system. Building even the simplest of data visualizations means hours of work in languages like R, Julia or Python. When your content is data, poking around in Photoshop simply makes no sense. In some way, it's the direct opposite of design: prettifying without context. One important aspect of modern design products is their increasing demand for temporal logic, where a linear narrative is replaced by a set of complex states."
jamie mahoney

OpenProcessing - Share your sketches! - 1 views

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    An opensource platform for processing.
Tom Woodward

Making the most detailed tweet map ever | Mapbox - 2 views

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    " And here is what those 6,341,973,478 tweets look like on a map, at any scale you want."
Enoch Hale

CodePen - Front End Developer Playground & Code Editor in the Browser - 2 views

shared by Enoch Hale on 06 Mar 15 - No Cached
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    Crazy, awesome ways to CSS
sanamuah

University Bans GitHub Homework (Then Changes Its Mind) | WIRED - 1 views

  • Recently, a computer science student at the University of Illinois did some class homework and posted the answers to GitHub, the code-sharing platform widely used by open-source software developers. And the university was peeved. Last week, using a DMCA takedown notice, the standard way to request removal of copyrighted material from the net, the university tried to force GitHub into vanishing the coursework from its service. After criticism from students, the school has rescinded the notice, but the incident goes a long way towards describing how the software world has changed in recent years. In short, the world’s developers are moving towards a model of open collaboration. And though that works well for them, it clashes with the way the world of programming traditionally operated—as embodied by the University of Illinois.
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