And the e-petition itself is here: http://epetitions.direct.gov.uk/petitions/15081
Please give it some support




The blog post would carry a lot more weight if it was written by somebody who actually knew the difference between coding and programming. Until s/he can learn the difference, they have no business teaching anything computer related to children.The word coding is a slang term for computer programming, used because programming basically means writing source code.


I can't seem to find it...netmaestro wrote:No, the info I replied to is in the links.

When I was in year 10 (or 11, I can’t remember) we were given the brief to “design and create a multimedia product” for an assessment towards GCSE ICT.
Most people opted to use powerpoint to create a sudo-multimedia product. I, however, decided to build a true multimedia product in Objective-C (a small game written for iPhone & iPod Touch which included a couple of videos, some story text, audio, it was an awesome little thing, it really was
The Powerpoints passed with flying colors, my project failed.
I asked the head of IT why he failed me, he told me he simply couldn’t mark it. He had installed the app on his iPhone, as had the rest of the IT staff (Including the technicians who really loved it!), played it, but couldn’t mark it because a)He didn’t understand how it worked and b)It was leagues above anything else he’d ever seen from the class.
I argued the case and managed to scrape a pass by teaching him the basics of Objective-C from scratch and by commenting every single line of code I wrote to explain exactly what it did and how it did it (all 3,400 lines, including standard libraries I used) which ended up being a huge time sink. Time, I was constantly aware, I could be relaxing or working on a project of my own.
I understand that my case is a little different from the one involving Ruby, you can’t expect every IT teacher to be versed in iPhone development, but there is no excuse for not having at least a basic understanding of Ruby/Python and absolutely no excuse for failing work because its difficult to mark.


Me too.Zach wrote:That's news to me. I use "coding" the same way.
In Britain lots of 'teachers' in state schools are not well qualified in the subject they are 'teaching':Zach wrote:It's nothing new, teachers pull this shit all the time in every field.