The Christian Science Monitor

More girls, African-Americans enroll in AP computer science. Why that matters.

Geraldine Louis, a junior and founding member of the extracurricular Robotics Club, attends its meeting at Brooke High School. The Boston school is among those in the US whose students are focusing on taking and passing Advanced Placement computer science tests.

‘You are role-playing a turtle. You can only move forward and only turn left. Remember, be the turtle.” 

The students listen to their teacher’s instructions and dutifully turn to their laptops, where the challenge awaits. On the screen is a small white box and a small black turtle, and next to it a larger box appears to type in their code. The room fills with clicking sounds and hushed whispers as the students get to work on their

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from The Christian Science Monitor

The Christian Science Monitor4 min read
A Love Letter To Lilacs And The Joys Of Fleeting Pleasure
I grew up with a lilac shrub right outside my bedroom window. Each May, when the breeze hit just right, the scent would trail through the screen. And how nice that scent was. Light, tender, sweet, sunny, vegetal – even a bit indolic, sharing the same
The Christian Science Monitor3 min read
In Cleaning Up My Corner Of The World, I Reclaimed My Trust In Others
When a copy of “The New Yale Book of Quotations” crossed my desk awhile back, I quickly turned to my favorite selection, which came courtesy of the late anthropologist Margaret Mead: “Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed citizens c
The Christian Science Monitor5 min readAmerican Government
Trump On Trial: What To Know As Case Moves Toward Pivotal Witness
This week porn star Stormy Daniels provided some of the most explosive testimony yet in former President Donald Trump’s hush money trial in a Manhattan courtroom. Under oath, and in front of a jury, Ms. Daniels described in vivid detail her alleged s

Related Books & Audiobooks