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The next big thing

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    The next big thing

    BBC News - Computer science teachers offered cash incentive

    "If we want our country to produce the next Sir Tim Berners-Lee, creator of the internet, we need the very best computer science teachers in our classrooms. They need to have the right skills and deep subject knowledge to help their pupils."

    Mr Gove was referring to the concept of a global system that would allow researchers anywhere to share information which was first proposed by Sir Tim while he was working at the Cern particle physics laboratory in Geneva in the 1980s. Sir Tim later named it the World Wide Web
    I'm sure his heart is in the right place, but his facts are all over the shop

    Labour questioned how effective the changes would be. Stephen Twigg MP, the shadow education secretary, said:

    "If we are to remain competitive, we need to instigate a computer science revolution, starting with getting primary school children to learn coding."
    This lot however seem to think we need to teach 6 year olds the modern equivalent of sewing (which we probably do) and seem to miss the point that it's the logical, mathematical, engineering and problem solving skills that give you the competitive advantage, not the ability to code per se.
    While you're waiting, read the free novel we sent you. It's a Spanish story about a guy named 'Manual.'

    #2
    "If we are to remain competitive, we need to instigate a computer science revolution, starting with getting primary school children to learn coding."

    Lots of Bobs code. How many Sir Tim Berners-Lees have come out of there?

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      #3
      Next big thing is clearly Sharepoint 2013.

      If you say otherwise you don't understand the internet.

      Comment


        #4
        There are thousands of grads that lined up their education as best they could for a career in IT and cannot get a sniff at work becasue of ICTs.

        I'll make a guess that there are about 500 bobs in Glasgow and a thousand in Edinburgh and that has taken an entire generation of home based grads out of a career round here.

        I would guess that out of every 100 programmers we can get trained 1 will take an idea and form a small company that hires and exports to a significant level.

        The government should try and get these people the first few years work after graduating rather than teaching them for loops at the age of 10.

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          #5
          surely this the most stupidist idea ever.

          training people up to the standards of berners lee, is training them up to yesterdays standards.
          teaching them maths etc would be perfect for getting a berners lee clone

          but thats history now.

          it's not a question of training. imo

          it's a question of setting the right environment
          and having a high tolerance of whacky ideas

          wherever they come from



          (\__/)
          (>'.'<)
          ("")("") Born to Drink. Forced to Work

          Comment


            #6
            Speaking as a tester the last thing we need is more people coding it's bad enough keeping the current generation of programmers in line
            In Scooter we trust

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              #7
              Originally posted by The Spartan View Post
              Speaking as a tester the last thing we need is more people coding it's bad enough keeping the current generation of programmers in line
              Speaking as a tester I think it's a brilliant idea to educate more people in the fine art of making bugs.
              And what exactly is wrong with an "ad hominem" argument? Dodgy Agent, 16-5-2014

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