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Moonhack cracks world record, goes global with Code Club Aussie kids help

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Moonhack cracks world record, goes global with Code Club Aussie kids help

Code Club Australia’s coding initiative, Moonhack, backed by the Telstra Foundation, has gone global, breaking last year’s record with 28,575 kids from 56 countries participating in the annual around-the-world coding event.

Code Club Australia. The organisation, along with 28,575 kids from all around the globe, on 15 August broke the world record for the most number of kids coding in one day, smashing last year’s Moonhack world record into smithereens.

First started in 2016, Moonhack is an “annual event powered by the Telstra Foundation, to give an opportunity for kids to learn code and for coding whizz kids to flex some coding muscle and engage with their peers".

We’re told that the programme “aims to advocate for digital literacy, an important skill every child needs in the modern world, and to continue the conversations about the importance of kids learning to code".

{loadposition alex08}Last year’s Moonhack “set the world record with 10,207 Aussie kids all coding on the same day,” but 2017 was not only destined to be bigger and better, it actually was, going global with “kids all over the world coding over a period of 24 hours".

The event first started in Wellington and Auckland in New Zealand, the closest cities to the International Date Line, and “continued around the globe for the day of 15 August in every country".

Code Club Australia tells us that “every single continent (apart from Antarctica – but maybe next year!) was represented in this year’s Moonhack, with countries including: Argentina, Bangladesh, Canada, Egypt, Estonia, Guatemala, India, Iraq, Nigeria, Russia, South Korea, the UK, the US, and many others, joining the movement".

The organisation explains that “kids took part in coding exercises from their homes, at Code Clubs in their schools, local libraries, and community centres. Participants were encouraged to complete one of Moonhack’s open source projects in Scratch, Scratch JR or Python, or create and submit their own coding projects that had a moon theme".

Code Club Australia general manager Kelly Tagalan said, “Moonhack was an incredible success. What these kids demonstrated was more than just a great big show of skill and interest in coding and education, they showed that together, kids from different backgrounds, nations, abilities and support systems, can work together towards a common goal that’s bigger than any one entity.

“Code Club isn’t just about technical skill building, it’s also about strengthening the community, raising the aspirations of future employees, and creating enthusiasm around peer collaboration and achieving the impossible, together. We’re so astounded that we were able to break the world record that we set last year and that children from all sides of the world were able to join in on this momentous occasion.”

Among the hundreds of clubs around Australia that hosted the participating coders, Telstra’s Customer Insight Centre and Gurrowa Innovation Lab in Sydney and Melbourne, respectively, were “Mission Control for Moonhack".

Nearly 50 kids (assisted by teachers, parents and Telstra volunteers) completed their exercises inside Telstra’s high-tech rooms.

Jackie Coates, head of the Telstra Foundation, Code Club Australia’s founding partner, said, “Through the wonder of space, Moonhack has inspired kids to create with technology, not just consume it. The Telstra Foundation shares Code Club’s mission to get every Australian kid coding. We’re blown away that this year’s Moonhack has connected with kids all over the world, truly demonstrating that code is the universal language of the 21st century.”

Quick Moonhack 2017 facts:

  • Number of kids coding on the same day: 28,575 (a RecordSetter about world record!)
  • Number of participating clubs: 484
  • Number of participating Australian kids: 17,167
  • Number of participating countries: 56
  • Age groups represented:
  • Under 7: 11%
  • 7-8: 28%
  • 9-11: 54%
  • 12-14: 22%
  • 15-17: 8%
  • Gender split: 51% male; 49% female
  • Number of Twitter mentions: 3,679,359

Below are a few comments from participating kids about why they joined up in this year’s Moonhack:

  • “My dad does high tech coding at Envato (that's is where he works)! I've always wanted to code like him it Looks so cool! I know HTML tags all of them! My dad knows all tags AND IT IS SO COOL!!!?????”
  • “Cause i can make cool games and animations. Coding is important because we use coding to program robots.”
  • "What I love about coding is that you can create your own games. Coding is becoming more important in the work environment and I want to understand it and write it."
  • “I want to create a robot that can do your chores. Moonhack is important to me because it lets kids all around the world code and learn about it.”
  • “I want to create anything that can benefit the life of one person, 100s of people, or maybe even thousands.”

Code Club Australia reminds us that it is “a not-for-profit organisation that provides tools and support for teachers and volunteers to provide free coding lessons. Currently, there are more than 65,000 Aussie kids across nearly 2000 Code Clubs in Australia, from Perth to Gold Coast and South-Western Sydney – Australia now has the biggest network of clubs outside the UK".

You can check out some of the cool projects kids from all around the world created during Moonhack here.


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