TED Ed has so many great videos for the classroom. These videos have interactive questions, which can be customized for your own students. You can sort the videos by subject if you are just browsing, or you can search for keywords. Many of the videos are short animations offering information about topics like coronavirus and “A Day as a Teenage Samurai.” Other videos pose riddles for the viewers, such as the ones in this playlist. (The River Crossing Riddle is a student favorite!)
If you know young people who like to code, TED Ed also has a series of 10 short (about 6 minutes long) videos where viewers are given challenges that reinforce coding concepts such as loops and conditionals. Think Like a Coder tells the story of a programmer named, “Ethic,” and her sidekick, “Hedge.” It begins when Ethic awakes to find herself imprisoned, and Hedge helps her to escape her locked room. Ethic must give Hedge specific instructions in order to discover the code to open the combination. The animation guides the viewer through the process of developing a code with loops, which would be more efficient than creating a line of code for each potential combination.
Think Like a Coder feels like a video game, but it isn’t. It also probably won’t appeal to students who are brand new to coding. If I was using this in the classroom, Think Like a Coder would be the perfect supplement for a Code.org studio course, and I might use the TED Ed or EdPuzzle tools to crop the video so that students can offer answers before the solution is given. This series would also be great to offer students who have high interest in this area, and would benefit from watching the videos independently.
