Arya Grigaliunas sat on the floor of the Storytime Room at Winter Park Public Library on Sunday and swiped her fingers back and forth across the screen of a purple-cased iPad. The digital movements ...
Wonder Workshop, the education technology company that introduced Dash and Dot to classrooms, has developed a virtual world with a virtual robot for student access in remote classes. The digital ...
Jefferson Middle School fifth graders Cameron Micciche, Dylan Gazdak, Nathan Houghwot, Reiley Kolstee and Haileigh Peterson work on a DASH coding challenge during Julie Livengood’s ACCEL enrichment ...
Editor’s Note: This is the first in a series of stories about ways in which students are benefiting from the Sonoma Valley Education Foundation’s Classroom Grants. Five brand-new miniature robots ...
A startup called Wonder Workshop is teaching kids how to code using Swift. Founded in 2012, Wonder Workshop makes toy robots, called Dash and Dot, that kids can control with programs they create using ...
An education technology company that produces a pair of robots for use by kids has just released lessons to help young students learn how to code. The in-house education team of Wonder Workshop, which ...
In the Ideal Gifts series, The Next Web team shares personal recommendations for gifts to give this holiday season. My household has had a demo unit of Dash for about a week and I don’t have anything ...
Second and third grade students at Bon Air Elementary School in Lower Burrell are celebrating March Madness this week — but with a ping-pong basketball, a plexiglass court, paper displays of defenders ...
There’s a new trend happening. Call it the Daddening of Tech: men who have made their fortunes in Silicon Valley suddenly having children, and becoming concerned that the walled gardens they in part ...
Forbes contributors publish independent expert analyses and insights. Curtis is a veteran journalist who never put down his Magic cards. Coding has quickly become the next educational frontier when it ...
Fifth grade students at Meadow Lane Elementary had two simple rules to follow: Avoid the cones and hit the pins. The students worked in groups Thursday morning, first placing colorful cones on a board ...