WEBCode a Dance Party to share with friends and family. Featuring Beyoncé, Harry Styles, Lizzo, Lil Nas X, Selena Gomez, music from Disney's "Encanto," and more!
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Learn today, build a brighter tomorrow. | Code.org
WEBJoin our highly supportive Professional Learning Program for middle and high school educators. Learn more. Every student in every school should have the opportunity to learn computer science. 80M. students on Code.org. 30M. of our students are young women. 298M. projects created on Code.org.
WEBAnyone, anywhere can organize an Hour of Code event or try any of the over 500+ one-hour tutorials, available in over 45 languages. This year Hour of Code is exploring the limitless realms of creativity empowered by AI!
WEBTry an Hour of Code. Watch a short video series about the basics of CS. Take an introductory, self-paced course. Create a game or an app. Try CS without a computer ('unplugged' & mobile options) Learn CS from the Code.org team and special guests.
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Students: How to Join a Class on Code.org - YouTube
WEBJoin the global community of over 2 million educators empowering the next generation of innovators, problem solvers, and digital citizens! Code.org supports teachers the whole way with professional learning, comprehensive curricula, …
WEBFor email-based sections, students will need their own email-based account, which they can sign up for at studio.code.org/users/sign_up, then visit code.org/join to enter a section code. Students who have joined an email-based section once won't need to re-join that section each time!
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I'd like to start using Code.org in my classroom. How should I start?
WEBStep 1 - Get an overview of Code.org's courses and materials. You can see all of our courses and their suggested student age ranges on our Course Overview page. Step 2 - Create a teacher account Do you already have an account? If so, skip to step 3. If you don't already have a teacher account on Code.org, start by creating one here.
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Getting your child set up on Code.org at home – Code.org
WEBThere are a few different options for signing in to Code.org: Word or picture passwords: Students who have word or picture passwords will need their 6-letter section code to sign in. To sign in, have your student: Go to the Code.org sign in page; Type in their section code (6 letters) Choose their name from the list that appears
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Creating Accounts for Students and Adding Them to Your Section - Code.org
WEBGet your students set up with their Code.org accounts - Students with accounts can save their work, and any non K-5 courses (CS Discoveries, CS Principles, CSA) require students to have accounts to work on them so we can verify their ages.