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Summer Tech Camps and Local Groups

Tim McCune on Flickr

Technology and Programming Summer Camps

While it may be late to sign up for the larger tech camps, local universities, colleges, community centers, and high schools often offer computer classes for kids and young adults. Be sure to ask your friends and call around to any local group that might offer classes.

With technology camps, here are a few useful questions to ask:

  • Can they give you references with email or phone contact information?
  • Are there are computers for everyone? There are cases where shared computers are fine, for example, pair programming where one person talks out the code design and one person codes. Sometimes camps do team activities with shared computers.
  • Who teaches the course and what is their background? Will they have one or more assistants to help individually?
  • Is there a nurse on site if your child has a problem?

You also should check out local coding schools to see if they have classes or events.

Local Coding and Technology Groups

There are many groups who provide after school and summer activities to help kids create with technology and have fun as a group. Here are a few to consider. If you have programming experience, these groups also can use mentors and leaders. Meetup.com also lists local technology events. And your local college computer science department may know of others.

Girls Who Code

http://www.girlswhocode.com/
They work to educate, inspire, and equip young women 13-17 with the skills and resources needed to pursue academic and career opportunities in computer science. Started in the US in 2012, they have programs around the country. They also have a program to help start clubs in schools and organizations.

CoderDojo

http://coderdojo.com/
Started in Ireland, this is a global organization of clubs where parents and adults act as mentors to help kids meet to work on programming projects. It's free and open to anyone. Think Cub Scouts or Boy Scouts but geared towards programming and technology. Chances are there is a CoderDojo club near you. If there is not a local group, the recipe and ingredient list is fairly simply: a few kids + parents + a free weekend day (or half day) + a place to meet with power and internet access.

Little Miss Geek

http://littlemissgeek.com/
A UK organization with after school clubs and other opportunities to inspire girls to take up technology or, as they put it last fall in celebrating Ada Lovelace, put the HER in Hero. It’s unclear how they do things (no list of events), but you can contact them through their website to see if there are local events and how you might help.

Tech-Girls

http://www.tech-girls.org/events.html
A US group designed to help girls discover technology is not anti-social, boring, or too hard. They have events year round in the Virginia and Charlottesville areas.

Learn More

Summer Technology Camps List

https://kidscodecs.com/resources/technology-summer-camps-kids/
https://kidscodecs.com/resources/coding-schools/
https://www.commonsensemedia.org/blog/from-minecraft-to-modding-a-summer-tech-camp-explainer-for-parents

Black Girls Code

http://www.blackgirlscode.com/

Girls Who Code

http://www.girlswhocode.com/

CoderDojo

http://coderdojo.com/

Code Club

Currently 2000+ UK after school groups to teach coding to kids.
https://www.codeclub.org.uk/

Little Miss Geek

http://littlemissgeek.com/

Tech-Girls

http://www.tech-girls.org/events.html

Meetup (Hacking tag)

http://www.meetup.com/find/?offset=0&psize=64&currentpage=1&allMeetups=true&categories=&keywords=hacking&radius=Infinity

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