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Tuesday, December 4, 2018

Celebrate Computer Science Education Week With NASA/JPL Edu

Celebrate Computer Science Week With NASA/JPL Education
 

Celebrate Computer Science Education Week With NASA/JPL Edu

This week is Computer Science Education Week, an annual event meant to encourage and inspire K-12 students to explore coding. Students, teachers and curious learners of all ages are encouraged to participate by using an hour of their week to create computer code as part of the Hour of Code initiative.

Whether your students are experienced programmers or just learning the basics, this is a great opportunity to take part and get students engaged in computer science! Try these standards-aligned lessons from NASA/JPL Edu to get involved and bring the excitement of NASA missions to students:

Explore Mars With Scratch Explore Mars With Scratch (Grades 3-8) – Students learn about surface features on Mars, then use the visual programming language Scratch to create a Mars exploration game.
Heat Flow Programming Challenge Heat Flow Programming Challenge (Grades 5-12) – Students use microcontrollers and temperature sensors to measure the flow of heat through a soil sample.
Engineering a Rocket Transporter Robotics: Engineering a Rocket Transporter (Grades 6-9) – Students design, build and program a robotic "super crawler" to transport a payload from a starting position to a target launch pad, deliver the payload in an upright position and return the robot to the starting point.
Robotics: Making a Self-Driving Rover Robotics: Making a Self-Driving Rover (Grades 6-9) – In this challenge, students must program a rover to get from point A to point B on a map without driving across any of the craters located between the two points.
Robotics: Creating a Roving Science Lab Robotics: Creating a Roving Science Lab (Grades 6-9) – In this challenge, students will program a rover to use a color sensor on several rock samples, allowing them to simulate how the Mars Curiosity rover uses it's ChemCam instrument to analyze light emitted from geological samples on Mars.

Explore more STEM lessons from NASA/JPL Edu online at jpl.nasa.gov/edu/teach. Learn more about Computer Science Week, here.

 

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