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Rescooped by Ricard Lloria from Arquitecturas digitales del aprendizaje para una educación 4.0
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The 5th ‘C’ of 21st Century Skills? Try Computational Thinking (Not Coding) | EdSurge News

The 5th ‘C’ of 21st Century Skills? Try Computational Thinking (Not Coding) | EdSurge News | Business Improvement and Social media | Scoop.it

"For better or worse, computing is pervasive, changing how and where people work, collaborate, communicate, shop, eat, travel, learn and quite simply, live. From the arts to sciences and politics, no field has been untouched.

The last decade has also seen the rise of disciplines generically described as “computational X,” where “X” stands for any one of a large range of fields from physics to journalism. Here’s what Google autocomplete shows when you type “computational.” (You can try it for yourself!)


Via John Evans, xavier suñé, Oskar Almazan
Oskar Almazan's curator insight, March 3, 2018 9:25 AM
Does current K-12 education equip every student with the requisite skills to become innovators and problem-solvers, or even informed citizens, to succeed in this world with pervasive computing? Since the turn of this century, the “4C’s of 21st century” skills—critical thinking, creativity, collaboration and communication—have seen growing recognition as essential ingredients of school curricula. This shift has prompted an uptake in pedagogies and frameworks such as project-based learning, inquiry learning, and deeper learning across all levels of K-12 that emphasize higher order thinking over rote learning. I argue that we need computational thinking (CT) to be another core skill—or the “5th C” of 21st century skills—that is taught to all students.
Rescooped by Ricard Lloria from iPads, MakerEd and More in Education
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The Case for Thinking in Code - Brian Aspinal @mraspinall

The Case for Thinking in Code - Brian Aspinal @mraspinall | Business Improvement and Social media | Scoop.it

“In Code Breaker, I write about the notion of thinking. Coding is about thinking. Sure, moving robots around the room is fun, but what is the real learning taking place?“


Via John Evans
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