Wednesday, August 12, 2020

New Coding & Coloring Book

I often occupy my time during the cold winter months designing a new STEM activity. This year I wrote a storybook about a group of robots who compete in the Office Olympics during Send Your Robot toWork Day

The book is based around Botley, a coding robot from LearningResources. In the story, Botley is owned by Mr V, a wacky inventor who spends his days designing goofy gadgets for science teachers. As Botley and his friends compete in the Olympic events, they discover that someone is trying to sabotage the competition – magnets slow down motors, coding cards get switched, lights are turned off during line following. These are just a few of the many obstacles Botley and his friends must overcome.

There are 13 coding exercises sprinkled throughout the book. As kids follow along with the story, they are encouraged to pause and replicate Botley’s moves using the coding instructions found in the Try It Yourself sections. They can learn to make Botley talk, navigate a maze, follow lines, spin around, dance, and avoid obstacles (with Botley’s included activity set, it’s easy to create unique playing fields). Botley uses a Remote Programmer for coding rather than a computer or tablet making it the perfect beginning robot for those young students who haven’t yet learned to read but can manipulate a button-press. I tried it out on my 4-year old nephew, and he caught on immediately.

With the advent of the pandemic, publication of my book was put on hold. So I spent my time during lockdown illustrating the story with scenes of the robots and their various mishaps. Now the book is available in 2 formats on Amazon: a paperback coding and coloring book for the more creative types who like to incorporate a little artistic flair in their STEM activities; or an eBook – the cheaper alternative for those strictly interested in coding.

Incidentally, I have no affiliation with Learning Resources. I just think Botley is cute and clever. I recently discovered that Learning Resources came out with a Botley 2.0 – a second generation robot that still uses a Remote Programmer for coding. He’s got a few more button-presses and his eyes light up, but basically he operates in much the same way. If you have a young child quarantined at home during this pandemic, Botley is a great way to keep the hands-on principles of STEM alive.