Learning to develop apps can help students solve problems, work together in creative ways, and bring their ideas to life. At this two-day professional learning workshop from Apple, you’ll learn how to introduce your students to coding using the free App Development with Swift curriculum.
During this workshop, you will:
- Learn why Swift—a powerful programming language—is great for both professional developers and students who are just learning to code.
- Explore the App Development with Swift curriculum that introduces students to the world of app development and the basics of Swift andXcode.
- Get hands-on experience using Mac andXcodeproject files included in the curriculum.
REGISTRATION DEADLINE: July 25, 2019
Workshop Details
Audience | Computer science instructors, Engineering instructors, STEAM educators in universities, community colleges, CTE programs, and high schools |
Level | Intermediate |
Instructor | Mark Sobkowicz |
Date | August 1 – 2, 2019 |
Earn | 15 PDPs |
Location | Benjamin Banneker Charter School, 21 Notre Dame Ave, Cambridge, MA |
MassCUE Member Cost | $300 |
Non-Member Cost | $340 |
Limit | 20 Participants |
Prerequisites |
Current and relevant experience with an object-oriented programming language (Swift, Objective-C, C#, Java, Python, and others). Participants need to bring a Mac running Mojave 10.14.4 (or current OS version) with the Xcode app (currently 10.2.1) Note: Participants will need personal Apple ID and password for signing in for developer certificate. Note: Open up XCode app after downloading – some files will be downloaded and installed at this time. |
Note about non-member rate | Consider joining MassCUE at member rate for $40 before registering so you can take advantage of other MassCUE membership benefits throughout the year, such as member-rate for workshops, free membership to Hoonuit and to MassCUE Learning Tours. |
Mark Sobkowicz
This course supports the following Massachusetts Digital Literacy and Computer Science standards:
9-12.CT.d.1 Use a development process in creating a computational artifact that leads to a minimum viable product and includes reflection, analysis, and iteration (e.g., a data-set analysis program for a science and engineering fair, capstone project that includes a program, term research project based on program data).
9-12.CT.d.7 Use a programming language or tool feature correctly to enforce operator precedence.
9-12.CT.d.8 Use global and local scope appropriately in program design (e.g., for variables).
9-12.CT.d.10 Use an iterative design process, including learning from making mistakes, to gain a better understanding of the problem domain.
9-12.CT.d.11 Engage in systematic testing and debugging methods to ensure program correctness.
9-12.CT.d.12 Demonstrate how to document a program so that others can understand its design and implementation.
Sign Up for This Workshop
App Development Workshop – Learn How to Teach Coding with Swift August 1 – 2, 2019 8:00 am – 3:00 pm Benjamin Banneker Charter School 21 Notre Dame Ave, Cambridge, MA 02140
Register Now