An OpenAI staff member is clearing up the "misinformation" online and telling high school students that they should "absolutely learn to code." On an episode of the OpenAI podcast last week, OpenAI ...
Three Lakota East High School students got together with an idea a little over a year ago: Teach computer coding to kids aged 7-14. The students themselves are not much older, aged 15-16, but within a ...
Behind every piece of technology is the code that makes it work. From February 20-22, 2026, middle and high school students ...
De Pere High School students are using Microsoft FarmBeats to integrate technology and agriculture. Students are learning coding and AI principles while applying them to real-world agricultural ...
You're currently following this author! Want to unfollow? Unsubscribe via the link in your email. Follow Brent D. Griffiths Every time Brent D. Griffiths publishes a story, you’ll get an alert ...
Fourth graders participate in an introductory lesson on artificial intelligence during a computer applications class at Dr.
Hamilton High School students learning computer skills through a first-year Esports program now have a new “arena” to battle in when competing with other area students. The converted classroom at ...
Grant Vance, a Rocky River High School computer science student, has been working toward sharing his knowledge of coding with other students. Grant, along with fellow rising sophomores Henry Galla and ...
Nowadays, digital literacy is no longer perceived as complementary skills, it has become a foundation for preparing the young generation to navigate the future, particularly amid the rapid digital ...
With Prince William schools recently celebrating computer science education week, the division highlighted efforts to make ...
LINCOLN, Neb. (KOLN) - Lincoln Public Schools has begun a new program where students are learning how to code in the online realm. Fourth graders at Adams Elementary School put down their pencils and ...
Jackson Middle School seventh grade students Lea Tanner, left, and Kerrigan Keller, right, watch as seventh grade science teacher Cherish George, center, shows them how to use a micro:bit computer on ...