'CodeSpells' Video Game Teaches Children Java Programming
CyberSlugGump writes "Computer scientists at UC San Diego have developed a 3D first-person video game designed to teach young students Java programming. In CodeSpells, a wizard must help a land of gnomes by writing spells in Java. Simple quests teach main Java components such as conditional and loop statements. Research presented March 8 at the 2013 SIGCSE Technical Symposium indicate that a test group of 40 girls aged 10-12 mastered many programming concepts in just one hour of playing."
Yeah, you go ahead and explain loops and conditional statements to 40 10-year-olds. They'll learn it in 5, master it in 10, forget all about it in 15. They'll probably be bored, too.
Or you can use a software like this which will engage them, encourage them, and help them remember it when they go home that night. It sure would be a shame if they were excited to learn more the next day and had a platform that was there to teach them and give you time to grade their math tests.
The reason that Java isn't as fun to program is the same reason that it's good for businesses. The language is very restrictive and prescriptive of how you should do things. For programmers that want flexibility and power, the constraints and extra typing (dual-meaning intended) chafe. But when you're using it as part of a large group, those same constraints become the things you can depend on. Where is a certain class located? Java requires it to be in a certain directory. What methods are available on a class? Java's static type system was designed to make tooling easy, so your IDE will tell you. And even talented programmers can mess up manual memory management...the less-talented wouldn't stand a chance without Java's memory management. The list of things that Java prevents you from screwing up is quite long.
Basically, for my home coding projects and projects where I work with a small team of talented developers, Java is one of my last choices. But for my boring 9-5 job where I'm working with 30 knuckle-draggers who don't understand the purpose of an interface, let alone how to write functional code that's easy to read, I want them writing Java and I'm willing to pay the Java price to get that.