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Thursday, September 14, 2006 12:00 AM

Why Johnny can't code

BASIC used to be on every computer a child touched -- but today there's no easy way for kids to get hooked on programming.

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  • Thursday, September 14, 2006 07:20 AM

    I understand where he's coming from

    Regardless of whether BASIC is relevant today, I do understand the point the author is making.

    I love computers and have since I learned to code colored dots flashing radomly on a Mac in BASIC, the "Kaleidoscope" program. My brother and I used to code little programs for fun on our TRS-80. Back then, if you had a computer, programming was part of the fun. Why was that? Was it that the games were so lame? Or that it was so easy to get into the BASIC program? Or because that's what the manual that came in the box showed you how to do? I don't remember my little TRS-80 doing anything but programming and playing games. So, I guess that is why. We had to, and we liked it!

    I never had the right kind of mind to be a programmer. I cheated my way through PASCAL classes in college. I knew I was hopeless when I struggled for hours to make my 400 lines of code work by the midnight deadline, and the friend who "helped" me solve the problem calmly gave me ten simple, efficient lines of code at 11:50 p.m. Of course his program worked instantly.

    Despite my limitations, I did end up working in the computer industry. I became a technical writer, a trainer, a graphic designer, an illustrator, and a web designer. I became what I describe on my resume as a "Computer Poweruser."

    I understand how computers work. Because I "get" computers, I will always be able to troubleshoot the programs I am using. I can always find out how to test the limits of a program. So, I have learned a huge number of software programs, and I have no fear of learning new ones.

    My stepson is now 19, and when he was in high school, he took classes in Photoshop. He used to visit in the summertime and play around on my software. It was obvious to me that he didn't really understand how a computer program worked. He had learned a few tricks, but he barely knew where his file was being saved. I felt like, wow, no one has taught you about binary. No one has taught you about how computers save information. No one has taught you programming logic.

    It's a hard thing to teach. It didn't all sink in just in one fell swoop for me; it took me years of a little programming here, a little there, a math teacher explaining binary, a friend showing me the solution for a PASCAL problem, and toiling over a manual to set up a Microsoft Word Macro.

    When I saw my stepson acting like he knew so much about the computer because he could make a razzle dazzle graphic with Photoshop, navigate the Internet, and throw up a little website using FrontPage, I felt at a loss. I consider his understanding of computers to be quite weak. He has a natural interest in computers, but how will he ever "get" them if never has to do any coding at all? My background with simple coding gave me the foundation to understand any software program that is thrown at me. I'd like for my daughter, and for my stepson, to have the same ability to work with computers that I have. I do wonder how kids today will develop a true understanding of how computers function if they are always end users and never programmers.

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