My son is 8, and he is obsessed with coding.
I've been teaching him Python, but it's challenging to find good programming tutorials accessible to kids.
After some time, this is where we settled:
1. Book: Python for Kids: amzn.to/493SWcP
2. Online course: Brilliant's brilliant.org/svpino
Notice that I work with Brilliant! I'm biased, but their Python tutorial is fantastic for super-beginners (like my 8-year-old.)
The book is also great. We learned about Python's Turtle library, a massive hit with my kid. (I didn't know about this module.)
If you are reading this, you are probably older than 8, but these two resources can be terrific if you want to learn with much less pressure. They start slow and move step by step.
Enjoy!
How do you determine the bounds of a data product? And how many data products should you have per domain? These were some of the questions we explored during a recent #datamesh roundtable discussion.
Read the transcript + watch the full replay here: bit.ly/3sHqs8y
Stellenangebot Wissenschaftliche/r Mitarbeiter/in, Lese- und Schreibzentrum , Universität Hildesheim, bis zum Aug. 2024.
Spannendes interdisziplinäres Projekt „Zukunftsdiskurs KI & Text“ zum Einsatz von KI Schreibtools in der Lehre bewerbung.uni-hildesheim.de/jobposting/997…#KI#ChaGPT#Job
Don't use ChatGPT for academic research. It creates fake citations to papers that don't even exist.
Instead, use Consensus — an AI-powered search engine designed for academics.
Ask it a question and it'll give you a summary of top 5-10 (real) published papers.