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Published byRhoda Montgomery Modified over 9 years ago
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By Yukyong Chung
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Given the terms of computational concepts, the students will be able to state examples matching the Scratch blocks. The students will be able to conduct the main steps of creating a Scratch project correctly which include Create a project, Choose a sprite, Drag and Snap Scratch blocks, Save, and Share, using Scratch. The students will create a working "About Me" Scratch project expressing themselves using Scratch by themselves.
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What is Scratch? What is helpful? Computational concepts Scratch Interface Exploring and Practicing Break-out Creating "About me" projects Sharing Closing
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Programming language : graphical programming language to easily create your own interactive stories, animations, and games.
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Programming language : graphical programming language to easily create your own interactive stories, animations, and games. Online community : share your creations and ideas with others all over the world
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Think creatively. Reason systematically. Develop collaboration skills. Practice computational skills.
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Sequences : identifying a series of steps for a task.
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Loops : running the same sequence multiple times.
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Events : one thing causing another thing to happen.
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Parallelism : making things happen at the same time.
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Conditionals : making decisions based on conditions.
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Operators : support for mathematical and logical expression.
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Data : storing, retrieving, and updating values.
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A project is a creation made in the Scratch program. Scratch projects are made up of objects called Sprites. To make a sprite do something, you snap together graphic Blocks into stacks, called Scripts.
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Explore Scratch interface. Practice Scratch blocks using the printout. Find another examples of Scratch blocks matching the computational concepts.
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10 minutes of break time.
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Create your own “About Me” project expressing yourselves. Add your projects to the Studio, “Instructional Tech Workshop”.
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Present your projects in front of class. Write comments on peer projects on the Scratch web site.
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Please share your ideas about Scratch, pros and cons, utilization, improvement, and so on.
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Brennan, K. & Resnick, M. (2012) New frameworks for studying and assessing the development of computational Thinking (http://web.media.mit.edu/~kbrennan/files/Brennan_Resnick_AERA2012_CT.pdf).http://web.media.mit.edu/~kbrennan/files/Brennan_Resnick_AERA2012_CT.pdf Brennan, K., Chung, M., & Hawson, J. (2011), Creative computing (http://scratched.gse.harvard.edu/sites/default/files/CurriculumGuide- v20110923.pdf) MIT Media Lab(n.d.), Scratch Reference Guide (http://scratch.mit.edu/files/ScratchReferenceGuide.pdf).http://scratch.mit.edu/files/ScratchReferenceGuide.pdf MIT Media Lab (2013) Getting Started With Scratch (http://cdn.scratch.mit.edu/scratchr2/static/__457b5935d6133646ecfc08b4d61130 44__//pdfs/help/Getting-Started-Guide-Scratch2.p. df). MIT Media Lab(n.d.), Learning with Scratch (http://scratched.gse.harvard.edu/sites/default/files/Learning%20with%20Scratch.pd f). MIT Media Lab(n.d.), Creating with Scratch (http://www.comp.nus.edu.sg/~leonghw/uit2201/Scratch/Demo-HowTo/Creating- with-Scratch.pdf).http://www.comp.nus.edu.sg/~leonghw/uit2201/Scratch/Demo-HowTo/Creating- with-Scratch.pdf Graphic image source: Google images
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