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Nobel prize winner Malala challenges girls worldwide to do an hour of coding
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Nobel prize winner Malala challenges girls worldwide to do an hour of coding

Malala Yousafzai, the youngest ever winner of the Nobel Peace Prize, has called on girls across the planet to discover computer science by taking part in the Code.org Hour of Code.

Last week Yousafzai (17) from Pakistan was jointly awarded the 2014 Nobel Peace Prize along with Indian children’s rights activist Kailash Satyarthi.

Yousafzai has been championing girls’ education since the age of 11, when the Taliban overran her hometown of Mingora, Pakistan, and threatened to destroy the schools.

Two years ago, a gunman from the fundamentalist group shot Yousafzai (17) in the head in the northwest Pakistani district of Swat, but quick actions of British doctors visiting Pakistan saved her life.

In a short video Malala encouraged girls across the world: “Every girl deserves to take part in creating the technology that will change our world and change who runs it. I challenge girls in every single country to learn one hour of code. You can do it, even if you don’t have a computer.” 

The global coding revolution

The Hour of Code is a global movement that reaches tens of millions of students in 180 countries to do an hour of coding.

Anyone, anywhere, can organise an Hour of Code event and one-hour tutorials are available in over 30 languages.

Last year some 15m students worldwide learned an Hour of Code, outpacing Facebook, Tumbler, Twitter, Pinterest and Instagram in reaching a comparable number of users.

The Hour of Code event coincides with EU CodeWeek which sees people all across Europe engage in making apps and building apps.

Earlier this week some 30 children from CoderDojos across Europe demonstrated their coding skills to MEPs at the European Parliament. CoderDojo, which was started in Cork three years ago by James Whelton and Bill Liao, now has 25,000 kids across the world learning how to code every week and ambitious plans are underway to grow this to 100,000 within 18 months.

Source: Silicon Republic

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