RPi Education

The Manual
A manual is currently in production by members of the Computing At School working group. This began on the 13 October 2011 and is due to be ready for early March 2012. The manual is aimed at the project's target audience, children, so that they can take their "First steps in Computer Science".

For the first release (~January/February 2012), there will mostly likely be very minimal documentation. A 'schools' release is due in June/July 2012.

Your Projects
'''Doing a project at school or have a Raspberry Pi Club? Add it in this section to allow others to follow your progress!'''

Please add details of your group and what plans you have for the RPi or provide a link to your homepage.

Puppy hacker School
For smarter kids of all ages, teachers, self-tutored and the fast learner. Based on doacracy principles of learning by doing Puppy Hacker School is open for learning on your existing hardware, using Puppy Linux. Whilst awaiting your first punnet of raspberries, get cracking. All bones welcome.

University of Manchester - School of Computer Science
We want to use the Raspberry Pi with a simple hardware board and set of downloadable activities to use it to encourage young people (or anyone else) get into embedded computing. We're currently looking at piface for the interface board and trying to come up with little activities to do. We've got some ideas but would love some more if anyone else wants to get involved.

We already run Linux workshops for schools and the National UK Schools Animation Competition, which uses Scratch.

The Manchester Grammar School Computing Society
A new co-curricular club for Y9 boys aimed squarely at the new "UK Computing in Schools" initiative. Details of what we're doing are on the MGS Computing Society page.

The University of Kent - School of Computing
Many of both the students and staff at the School of Computing have been following the Raspberry Pi for a long time and are eagerly waiting to get started on projects using them. We are also strong supporters of the Foundation's objective in getting more young people interested in "real" computing rather than just playing games or web browsing.

Programming languages
Items in bold specifically support the Raspberry Pi device


 * http://www.kidsruby.com/ - Have fun and make games, or hack your homework using Ruby! Just tell your parents or teachers you're learning Ruby programming... ;)
 * http://scratch.mit.edu/ - Graphical OO-based visual programming environment.
 * http://www.alice.org/ - Similar to scratch AFAICT
 * http://python.org/ - The original 'designed for teaching' language of the 90s
 * http://lua.org/ - Small, extensible and fits in your head
 * BBC BASIC - The original 'designed for teaching' language of the 80s - A large number of implementations are listed here: http://www.bbcbasic.co.uk/bbcbasic.html
 * http://basic256.org/index_en - Another BASIC variant with integrated IDE and simple graphics.
 * C/C++ via GCC + CMake build system for advanced use.

Communities

 * http://madlab.org.uk/about/ - The Manchester Digital Laboratory
 * The Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics Network, UK - This covers all the red tape that is necessary when working with children, as well as networking with other like minded volunteers to share ideas.

Software suites

 * http://gcompris.net/-en- - GCompris is a high quality educational software suite comprising of numerous activities for children aged 2 to 10. Confirmed working on alpha boards.
 * http://www.sugarlabs.org/ - The Sugar Sweet, a desktop environment used on the XO one laptop per child.
 * OpenSUSE Linux for Education (LiFE) - an open source Linux operating system with educational software.

Libraries/applications

 * http://arstechnica.com/gaming/news/2006/02/games-perl.ars - Developing games with Perl and SDL
 * http://www.pygame.org/ - Simple SDL wrapper for Python.
 * http://docs.python.org/library/idle.html - The Python IDE that comes with Python.
 * http://love2d.org/ - Something akin to pygame for Lua.
 * https://github.com/ntoll/RaspberryPy - An interactive set of programming lessons for Python, written in Python. To be built at PyconUK (http://pyconuk.org) during the sprints. :-)
 * http://www.khronos.org/openvg/ - OpenVG vector graphics library. Natively supported by GPU(?)
 * Hackety Hack - an open source application that teaches coding in a simple manner.

General resources

 * http://www.cs4fn.org/ - Computer Science for fun
 * http://computingatschool.org.uk/ - Computing at School Working Group
 * http://en.literateprograms.org/LiteratePrograms:Welcome - An MIT project to develop programs which are self describing.
 * http://www.happynerds.net/view/linux - External site listing educational programming resources for children.
 * http://projectguts.org/ - An extracurricular program in the US teaching programming using LOGO-like language.

Articles/opinion pieces/trade bodies
In the UK:
 * http://royalsociety.org/education/policy/computing-in-schools/ - The Royal Society's Computing in Schools project
 * http://securiously.wordpress.com/2011/09/09/do-we-really-need-to-teach-our-kids-to-code/ - Teaching the skills associated with programming rather than programming as an aim in itself.

General:
 * http://www.edutopia.org/programming-the-new-literacy - Programming is the new literacy
 * http://bengoldacre.posterous.com/three-things-we-have-to-teach-in-schools - Ben Goldacre's list of "Three things we have to teach in schools"


 * http://blog.jgc.org/2011/09/teach-our-kids-to-code.html
 * http://www.osnews.com/story/6282 - An article on the command-line as a good interface for new users.

Direct action

 * http://epetitions.direct.gov.uk/petitions/15081 - A petition to the Department for Education about teaching programming in schools (UK only).