European Commission

EUROPEAN COMMISSION
PRESS RELEASE
Brussels, 29 July 2014
Make 2014 the summer you learn how to code!
If the sun is getting too much, you've finished that book and crosswords have lost their
magic — then why not make August 2014 the summer you learn a new digital language?
In advance of EU Code Week, taking place across Europe 11-17 October 2014, here are a
few ways you, your friends and family can learn how to code this summer.
Go on a programming camp
Just a taster of some of the activities which EU Code Week Ambassadors have on their
menu in August
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Estonia Kääriku, Otepää Parish, 11-15 August. Children aged 9 to 14 can learn
how to programme in Scratch, robotics and use Kodu GameLab. In addition to digital
activities there is plenty of time for sport and other team-building exercises. More
information
Budapest, Hungary, 11-15 August. This camp is based on the 'Train the Trainer'
ROBOTICS course. More information
Budaörs, Hungary, 20 June to 29 August. Weekly summer coding events for kids
8-15. More information
And there are many more out there to choose from:
- Try out coding taster-sessions and workshops, for example in
France
 Lille, 20 and 27 August. Cyber-Espace de EuraTechnologies is offering two coding
workshops where children 8-12 can learn scratch. The first Atelier Coding - Scratch
(level 1) is happening on Wednesday 20 August, the second on Wednesday 27
August. More details and registration on +33 3 20 09 93 15 or via email
[email protected]
 Dunkerque, 24 August. A Coding Goûter on 24 August will give participants the
chance to try out various programming tools.
IP/14/882
Germany
 Düsseldorf, 30 August. Children between 4 and 9 are welcome to learn
elementary programming with their parents. More information
- Learn some programming online
If you can't join a summer camp here are four ways of getting started (from the EU Code
Week resources page).
- Coding lessons for beginners
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Scratch is a free programming language targeting young people (but good for adults
as well!) where you can create your own interactive stories, games and animations.
 Codecademy: Learn to code interactively, for free.
 Code School: Code School teaches web technologies in the comfort of your browser
with video lessons, coding challenges, and screencasts.
 Code.org tutorials: Simple tutorials for beginners that can be completed in an hour
or less.
- Full online courses available at
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Coursera
MIT OpenCourseWare
Udacity
Khan Academy: fundamentals of programming in the JavaScript language and
ProcessingJS library.
- Coding activities in Europe and the world
Two well-known initiatives are CoderDojo and Rails Girls, which are global volunteer-led
community of free programming clubs for young people and women respectively.
At CoderDojos, young people between 7 and 17 learn how to code, develop websites,
apps, programmes, games and explore technologies. Rails Girls targets women who learn
prototyping, basic programming and get introduced to the world of technology.
Another example is Code.org, a US-based industry-backed non-profit. Many international
businesses (Telefonica, Google, Microsoft, Telerik etc.) also organise various coding
activities.
Do you organise a coding activity? Add it here – even if it does not take place during
the Code Week in October. Over 100 events are already listed! You can also let
@codeWeekEU know and we will share the news.
Commissioners back EU Code Week 11-17 October 2014 – Bring
your ideas to life with coding
The second edition of EU Code Week will take place 11-17 October 2014. The idea is
making coding more visible, demystify these skills, and bring motivated people together to
learn. We aim at getting millions of children, parents, teachers, entrepreneurs and policy
makers to come together in events and classrooms to learn programming and related
skills.
European Commission Vice-President Neelie Kroes (Digital Agenda) and Commissioner
Androulla Vassiliou (Education, Culture, Multilingualism and Youth) have sent a joint letter
to EU Education Ministers urging them to encourage children to get involved in EU Code
week. "Promoting coding skills in Europe is part of the solution to youth unemployment,"
they say.
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The initiative has attracted the support of coding and education movements like
CoderDojo and Rails Girls and of major tech and IT companies (e.g. Rovio, Microsoft,
Telefonica, Liberty Global, Google and Facebook) who are all helping bring coding to
millions of children for example by offering coding taster sessions, by developing learning
modules and helping to train teachers.
How is EU Code Week organised?
In each country one or several EU Code Week Ambassadors have volunteered to be the
main point of contact for Code Week, help spread the vision of the initiative and connect
local coding communities and interested actors.
EU Code Week events are organised locally and published on a map the EU Code Week
website by the organiser.
Why is coding important?
Each and every interaction between humans and computers is governed by code.
Programming is everywhere and fundamental to the understanding of a hyperconnected world. Coding is the literacy of today.
Basic coding skills will also be needed for many jobs in the near future. More than 90% of
professional occupations nowadays require some ICT competence. Moreover, the number
of graduates in computer science is not keeping pace with this demand for skills. As a
result many open vacancies for ICT practitioners cannot be filled, despite the high level of
unemployment in Europe. If we do not appropriately address this issue at a European and
national level, we may face a shortage of up to 900,000 ICT professionals by 2020. The
share of women in choosing technical careers is also alarmingly low. Coding is a way to
attract girls to choose tech careers.
Making ICT careers more attractive is one of the objectives of the Grand Coalition for
Digital Jobs
Useful links
EU Code Week website
Map of events (events are added by local organiser and checked by Code Week
Ambassador)
EU Code Week video
Press release on EU Code Week (in all EU languages)
Twitter: @codeWeekEU Hashtag: #codeEU
Facebook: codeEU
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Contacts :
[email protected] Tel: +32.229.57361
Ryan Heath (+32 2 296 17 16)
Twitter: @RyanHeathEU
Dennis Abbott (+32 2 295 92 58); Twitter: @DennisAbbott
Siobhan Bright (32 2 295 73 61)
For the public: Europe Direct by phone 00 800 6 7 8 9 10 11 or by e-mail
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