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Participants at the Global Game Jam (GGJ) three-day event inside the Urban Hub in downtown Green Bay. GGJ is an annual international event at which developers and enthusiasts of all skill levels collaborate to make digital or tabletop original games over 48 hours. UW-Green Bay, Sue Pischke University Photographer

Images from the second Kingswood Hack Jam which saw pupils in Years 7-10 use a microbit to create a solution to a problem.

Photographer: Micah Smith

All photos are the property of Creative Services and may not be used without permission. Please contact creative@jmu.edu if you are interested in using any photos included in our collection.

In 2014 a handful of companies in Boulder thought, “wouldn’t it be cool if the whole town celebrated Computer Science Education Week and Hour of Code?”

 

And so they did just that! There was a week long, town-wide celebration of technology, innovation, and computer science educational fun for parents, kids, and teachers.

 

Programs were open to kids as young as 4 and as old as high school. Apps were made, robots were built, Scratch was learned, and a lot of families exclaimed that this kind of learning disguised as festive fun was just what they needed to help their kids explore CSED.

 

Photos by 23rd Studios - Paul Talbot - Please contact 23rd Studios for permissions - info@23rdstudios.com

 

Sharon Gumia classroom, Tony Dillon class, Homay Valafar research group

* (Just off the picture): Everywhere: The Dawning Age of Ubiquitous Computing by Greenfield

* Stiquito by Conrad and Mills

* Edexcel BTEC Nationals in Computing by Knott and Waites

* Web ReDesign 2.0: Workflow that Works by Goto and Cotler

* Projects in Computing and Information Systems by Dawson

* Creating Applications with Mozilla by Boswell et al.

* Designing with Web Standards by Zeldman

 

Some bits of Software, including:

* Civilization: Call to Power

* Freeway Pro

Blair Academy Campus 2/14/17

Blair Academy programming class with Michael Garrant.

PHOTO BY Tyson Trish

  

Participants at the Global Game Jam (GGJ) three-day event inside the Urban Hub in downtown Green Bay. GGJ is an annual international event at which developers and enthusiasts of all skill levels collaborate to make digital or tabletop original games over 48 hours. UW-Green Bay, Sue Pischke University Photographer

Participants at the Global Game Jam (GGJ) three-day event inside the Urban Hub in downtown Green Bay. GGJ is an annual international event at which developers and enthusiasts of all skill levels collaborate to make digital or tabletop original games over 48 hours. UW-Green Bay, Sue Pischke University Photographer

Manuel A. Pérez-Quiñones

Photographer: Rachael Winfrey

All photos provided are the property of Creative Services and may not be used without permission.

Please contact creative@jmu.edu if you are interested in using any photos included in our collection.

Images from the second Kingswood Hack Jam which saw pupils in Years 7-10 use a microbit to create a solution to a problem.

Michael Soltys, Chair and Professor of Computer Science and Information Technologies, lectures to CI students.

Sharon Gumia classroom, Tony Dillon class, Homay Valafar research group

Participants at the Global Game Jam (GGJ) three-day event inside the Urban Hub in downtown Green Bay. GGJ is an annual international event at which developers and enthusiasts of all skill levels collaborate to make digital or tabletop original games over 48 hours. UW-Green Bay, Sue Pischke University Photographer

Images from the second Kingswood Hack Jam which saw pupils in Years 7-10 use a microbit to create a solution to a problem.

Images from the second Kingswood Hack Jam which saw pupils in Years 7-10 use a microbit to create a solution to a problem.

Michael Soltys, Chair and Professor of Computer Science and Information Technologies, lectures to CI students.

In 2014 a handful of companies in Boulder thought, “wouldn’t it be cool if the whole town celebrated Computer Science Education Week and Hour of Code?”

 

And so they did just that! There was a week long, town-wide celebration of technology, innovation, and computer science educational fun for parents, kids, and teachers.

 

Programs were open to kids as young as 4 and as old as high school. Apps were made, robots were built, Scratch was learned, and a lot of families exclaimed that this kind of learning disguised as festive fun was just what they needed to help their kids explore CSED.

 

Photos by 23rd Studios - Paul Talbot - Please contact 23rd Studios for permissions - info@23rdstudios.com

 

Images from the second Kingswood Hack Jam which saw pupils in Years 7-10 use a microbit to create a solution to a problem.

Images from the second Kingswood Hack Jam which saw pupils in Years 7-10 use a microbit to create a solution to a problem.

The dog stands alone (bottom image) after a UC San Diego pedestrian remover automatically removed the man walking the dog (top image) and filled in the hole with building, grass, curb and sidewalk.

 

Image credit: Google Street View / UC San Diego

 

Read more at: www.jacobsschool.ucsd.edu/news/news_releases/release.sfe?...

Blair Academy Campus 2/14/17

Blair Academy programming class with Michael Garrant.

PHOTO BY Tyson Trish

  

Participants at the Global Game Jam (GGJ) three-day event inside the Urban Hub in downtown Green Bay. GGJ is an annual international event at which developers and enthusiasts of all skill levels collaborate to make digital or tabletop original games over 48 hours. UW-Green Bay, Sue Pischke University Photographer

Professor of computer science at Stanford University

Images from the second Kingswood Hack Jam which saw pupils in Years 7-10 use a microbit to create a solution to a problem.

Michael Soltys, Chair and Professor of Computer Science and Information Technologies, lectures to CI students.

Michael Soltys, Chair and Professor of Computer Science and Information Technologies, lectures to CI students.

Images from the second Kingswood Hack Jam which saw pupils in Years 7-10 use a microbit to create a solution to a problem.

Images from the second Kingswood Hack Jam which saw pupils in Years 7-10 use a microbit to create a solution to a problem.

Michael Soltys, Chair and Professor of Computer Science and Information Technologies, lectures to CI students.

Sharon Gumia classroom, Tony Dillon class, Homay Valafar research group

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