Showing posts with label Coding Basics. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Coding Basics. Show all posts

Saturday, November 9, 2019

Planing an Event: Coding Basics

One thing many leaders on facebook groups seems to want is more programming provided by someone else.  The girls enjoy a chance to do something different, and you don't have to be the one planning it, making sure everything you need is available, and otherwise running the show.  Going to events planned by others also allows your girls to experience things you aren't comfortable leading.  However, to get events run by "others" you either have to pay a professional a lot of money for what could turn out to be a so-so program, or you need something that someone inside GS offers, basically at cost.  This post is to encourage you, the ordinary leader, to take the lead on providing an event for girls in your Service Unit, with the hope that another leader will do the same, with a different topic.  Supporting each other, we can offer our girls more programming for less money than if we depend on outside vendors or council. While the post is written leader-to-leader, the steps involved are similar to those that would be used if an older girl troop wanted to do programming for younger girls as a money-earning project.

Sunday, August 4, 2019

Daisy Coding For Good: Coding Basics

This year's new badges include a series of three "Coding for Good" badges for Daisies, Brownies and Juniors.  The basic requirements are available on GSUSA's Badge Explorer and meeting plans are in Volunteer Toolkit, to which most leaders have access.  While GSUSA has published a badge pamphlet for this set, it, like the sets for Cybersecurity and Robotics, is for background information only.  It is not in the format of three requirements and three options for each requirement.

One issue people have with VTK plans is that by giving leaders a script to follow (if desired) they make the plans very wordy and hard to skim.  This post and others like it are designed to summarize the VTK plans so that leaders can get a real feel for what the badge entails, and then, if they decide to do the badge, they can more carefully review the VTK plans.  In fact, I do not recommend that you do the badge without reviewing the VTK plans because their talking points are what connect the activities to coding.

Wednesday, July 17, 2019

Brownie Coding for Good Badges: Coding Basics


GSUSA has just released this year's new badges.  For Daisies, Brownies and Juniors, these badges included a new series:  Coding for Good.  Each level gets three badges, which, like the robotics and cybersecurity badges, were designed to be done sequentially.  Also it appears that like the robotics and cybersecurity badges, if you purchase the badge brochure, instead of getting a choice of three activities per requirement, you are given background information to use with the VTK plans.  In other words, your activities choices are to use what is in VTK or to come up with your own activities.