A Teaspoon of Video: Difference between revisions

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Computer Science education expert Mark Guzdial suggests kids can learn effectively from Task-Specific Programming (TSP, or "teaspoon") languages that can be learned in a few minutes, teaching one idea from theoretical CS in the context of a motivational and interesting automation task. Your job is to create one of these educational languages, that teaches an important computing concept in a form relevant to processing social media video.
Computer Science education expert Mark Guzdial suggests kids can learn effectively from Task-Specific Programming (TSP, or "teaspoon") languages that can be learned in a few minutes, teaching one idea from theoretical CS (the medicine?) in the context of a motivational and interesting automation task (a teaspoon of sugar). Your job is to create one of these educational languages, that teaches an important computing concept in a form relevant to processing social media video.

Revision as of 09:17, 16 October 2022

Computer Science education expert Mark Guzdial suggests kids can learn effectively from Task-Specific Programming (TSP, or "teaspoon") languages that can be learned in a few minutes, teaching one idea from theoretical CS (the medicine?) in the context of a motivational and interesting automation task (a teaspoon of sugar). Your job is to create one of these educational languages, that teaches an important computing concept in a form relevant to processing social media video.