Year in Review Archives - Saturday Kids | Coding, Digital Literacy for Kids & Parents https://www.saturdaykids.com/blog/tag/year-in-review/ Saturday Kids have more fun. Adventures in Tech Ed for kids, resources for parents and kids to explore, create, and play with technology. Tue, 21 Apr 2020 11:49:55 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.2.6 https://www.saturdaykids.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2018/09/cropped-Screen-Shot-2018-09-14-at-9.52.37-PM-32x32.png Year in Review Archives - Saturday Kids | Coding, Digital Literacy for Kids & Parents https://www.saturdaykids.com/blog/tag/year-in-review/ 32 32 On Gratitude and Giving Back – Reflections on 2019 from John https://www.saturdaykids.com/blog/john-tan-reflections-2019-business-for-good/ https://www.saturdaykids.com/blog/john-tan-reflections-2019-business-for-good/#respond Tue, 31 Dec 2019 02:36:58 +0000 https://www.saturdaykids.com/blog/?p=2316 Gratitude and giving back. This is what I would like to talk about in this year end reflection post – gratitude for the opportunities we’ve been given; and giving back, because ultimately our raison d’etre as a business is to make a difference. I’m incredibly grateful to be in the inaugural class of the Obama […]

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Gratitude and giving back. This is what I would like to talk about in this year end reflection post – gratitude for the opportunities we’ve been given; and giving back, because ultimately our raison d’etre as a business is to make a difference.

I’m incredibly grateful to be in the inaugural class of the Obama Foundation Asia-Pacific Leaders Program. More than meeting President and Mrs Obama, what was really special is getting to spend 5 days with 200 leaders from 33 nations and territiries who think beyond themselves. 200 individuals who have done so much for their community and are dedicating their careers to doing more.

John with the other inspiring Obama leaders from Singapore.

Take Holly for example – she is the Global Programs Manager at UniKorea Foundation, an organization that aims to narrow the gap between the two Koreas and prepare for a possible reunification of the Korean peninsula. Or Vivienne from the International Detention Coalition, an organization that envisions a world that respects the rights and dignity of immigrants. The list goes on. The leadership workshops we went through over the 5 day convening, the friendships developed, the rallying around shared causes – it’s all these things that will make us better leaders. Leaders who lead with empathy and humility.

Empathy is a big reason why we run Code In The Community (CITC), a multi-year programme supported by Google that brings digital literacy to disadvantaged children in Singapore. 2019 was meant to be the final year of CITC, but with the continued support of Google and other organisations, there will be more runs in 2020 and beyond. For that I am grateful.

2019 also saw Saturday Kids run free coding programmes for the first time in Cambodia. With the support of Development Innovations and USAID, we were able to run Coding Cats and enlist a team of instructors who volunteered to translate Scratch to Khmer to make the world’s most popular block-based programming language accessible to young Cambodians. With the support of Smart Axiata, we offered Scratch to an even younger age group in Cambodia through Tiny Coding Cats. Neither of these programmes would have been possible without a super dedicated and resourceful local partner, so thank you Raintree Cambodia.

I’m also grateful to the Saturday Kids Japan team for the work they have put into developing Saturdayland, a programme to get kids to learn English through coding. When our country manager, Yoshi, launched Saturday Kids’ Tokyo office in February 2019, we did not expect to end the year with a team of six full-timers in Tokyo, plus a crew of passionate part-timers and freelancers who bring different skills and experience to the Japan team. Neither did we expect Saturdayland to be on national television in Japan (with a cameo for my 2 older boys Camper and Cory), or for us to be working with one of the largest cram schools in Japan to reinvent the way functional English is taught.

Staying with Japan, I’m grateful to the parents who sent their kids to Saturday Kids Unplugged in Karuizawa. It’s the first time we’ve run an outdoor camp, but parents trusted us enough to plan a family vacation around our camp in order for their kids to enjoy 3 days of outdoor fun. There are a couple of returning families for the second edition of Saturday Kids Unplugged in June 2020 (4 days instead of 3 because the kids wanted more). Special thanks to our partner Etonhouse Japan, without whom we wouldn’t have been able to pull off an outdoor camp. 

In my last end of year note, I mentioned Saturday Kids’ investment in Wunder, an online coding school in Kazakhstan. Earlier this year the Wunder team joined us full-time, so we now have a software engineering and curriculum team in Almaty. That’s 3 offices (Singapore, Tokyo, Almaty) today versus one 12 months ago. It’s not just about increasing our geographical footprint. It’s about attracting like-minded individuals who believe in the power of education to create social impact.

Which brings me to giving back. At the Obama Foundation Asia-Pacific Leaders convening I met a Pacific island Leader whose country is literally disappearing because of rising sea levels. In her country every time a child is born, the family plants a tree for the child. The tree symbolises strength, protection, and serves as a reminder of where home is. Unfortunately her tree has disappeared because of climate change. Over the 5 days I heard many other stories like this, which reminded me how fortunate I am to be born in Singapore. Many of these Leaders have very little. Phonsy, a Filipino Leader in my community group barely made it to the convening because Northern Philippines was struck by a typhoon just days before and electricity was down. Many of his colleagues lost everything. Or Yana, a Leader from Papua New Guinea who had to walk miles to school when she was young. Over the years, she lost a few friends to the river she crossed every day on her way to school.

I would like Saturday Kids to be a force for good, specifically in education. At the Global Education Summit in Beijing in early December, UNESCO’s Director of Education Jordan Naidoo said that we are not on track for Sustainable Development Goal 4 – Quality Education. 262 million children and youth do not attend school. 617 million or 58% of children are not able to read and do basic math. Half of pre-school age children are not enrolled in early childhood education. These are disheartening statistics. But there’s hope. Hope lies in the will to make a difference.

Saturday Kids’ mission is to inspire every child to be a curious, self-directed learner. It’s an impossible mission, because we’re not going to reach every child. But it’s aspirational, and it encapsulates how we think quality education can be made accessible to children. Teaching and learning are two sides of the same coin. Quality education is not just about better teachers; it’s also about the desire and ability to learn.

Having 600 million children who are not able to read and do basic math is clearly an issue of access. But access does not necessarily have to be in the form of access to teachers and teaching – it can also be access to learning material, tools and framework. Teaching content is giving a child a fish. Getting a child to learn how to learn is teaching him how to fish. It’s idealistic, but I believe it’s also practical. Sugata Mitra’s Hole In The Wall programme has proven that with access to computers and the internet, children can teach themselves enough English to use email, chat and search engines.

Saturday Kids started in Singapore and with the opening of the office in Japan, we’re very much a first world economy business. Our hearts, however, are with children who have little or no access to quality education. Even in countries like Singapore and Japan, there are disadvantaged children (in Japan urban-rural divide is especially pronounced). And of course there are millions of children in the developing world we can help. The challenge is finding the balance between doing good and running a sustainable business. We are not a non-profit, so there’s no donor funding we can rely on. The goal is to become a triple bottom line business that’s not only profitable, but also good for people and the planet.

With tenacity, heart, and a dose of luck, we’ll get there.

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Reflections on 2018: A note from our founder, John https://www.saturdaykids.com/blog/john-tan-reflections-on-2018/ https://www.saturdaykids.com/blog/john-tan-reflections-on-2018/#respond Thu, 31 Jan 2019 03:52:18 +0000 https://www.saturdaykids.com/blog/?p=1477 When I look back at 2018, I’ll consider it a watershed year for Saturday Kids. Early in the year we raised our first proper round of funding from Potato Productions. They had us at ‘Be Creative, Do Good, Have Fun’. Especially the Do Good bit. It’s not easy to find investors who passionately believe in driving […]

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When I look back at 2018, I’ll consider it a watershed year for Saturday Kids.

Early in the year we raised our first proper round of funding from Potato Productions. They had us at ‘Be Creative, Do Good, Have Fun’. Especially the Do Good bit. It’s not easy to find investors who passionately believe in driving social impact through education. Hans (Chief Potato) is one of them.

In 2018, we more than doubled the number of disadvantaged children who graduated from Code In The Community. The first run of Code In The Community in 2019 begins 26 January. We hope to again double the number of CITC graduates this year.

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I attended BETT for the first time in 2018. BETT is one of the largest edtech shows in Europe, bringing together startups and educators from the global education community every January in London. 2 new courses that came out of my BETT visit are Back To Basics: From Zeroes to Python Heroes with Pi-top and Become A Rockstar Code DJ with Kano.

One big reason for attending these education shows is to discover technology and tools that can make kids curious, self-directed learners. In Pi-top and Kano, I found two education startups creating tools for kids to learn physical computing and coding, and more importantly, tools that allow kids to express their boundless creativity and imagination.

(Check out a guest post we wrote on Pi-top’s blog about the Back To Basics course we created and why we think hands-on learning is important!)  

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In June, a couple of us spent 3 weeks in the US. We visited San Francisco to hang out with Saturday Kids’ Chief Tinkerer GP. GP brought us to his tinkering lab on Treasure Island, showed us new tech toys he is playing with his kids (5 and 7), and arranged for us to visit 826 Valencia, a pirate store / community project by Dave Eggers to teach disadvantaged children creative writing. We also got the chance to sit down with GP to talk about his kids’ experience at The New School (“Inquiry for All”), as well as formalise GP’s curriculum/product development and partnership role at Saturday Kids.

The same trip also brought us to Chicago to attend ISTE, the world’s largest Edtech conference. Highlights from ISTE included listening to Mitch Resnick talk about the importance of thinking and acting creatively and the Lifelong Kindergarten Group’s approach of Projects, Passion, Play and Peers. Andy Weir, the author of The Martian, gave a hugely entertaining keynote speech on curiosity, problem solving and failure, topics that are close to our hearts. 

Shortly after coming back from the US, I got the chance to attend a close door dialogue session with Minister of Education Ong Ye Kung, which left me feeling a lot more hopeful about the future of education in Singapore.

The Minister understands things need to change within the education system to prepare kids for a future that will increasingly be driven by AI and automation. It will just take a while for changes to work their way through the system.

the future of education

In August we announced our investment in Wunder, an online coding school in Kazakhstan.

Wunder’s web platform makes learning coding easier through a collection of quizzes, video presentations, mini-games, and live support from instructors. Through our investment in Wunder, we hope to offer parents and kids the flexibility of anytime, anywhere learning. A web platform will also allow us to reach more children and scale the impact we can make.

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In October, through our non-profit partner 21C Girls, we launched Empower, an AI course for girls.

Empower’s mission is to introduce girls in Singapore to the basics of AI and its applications, and to give girls the creative confidence to enter any 21st century industry. We kicked off Empower with 30 girls from Ngee Ann Polytechnic, half of whom are business students with no programming background.

The girls have clearly benefited from learning the basics of artificial intelligence, combined with conversations with entrepreneurs (Dr Ayesha Khanna for instance, founder of 21C Girls and Addo.ai), and we hope to scale Empower this year to reach many more girls across all polytechnics in Singapore.

To wrap up the year, a couple of us traveled to Tokyo in November (I was invited to speak at EdvationXSummit), and through a combination of luck and persistence we found our country manager for Japan. We will be opening a Tokyo office in 2019, and as part of our Japan launch we are running an outdoor summer camp in Karuizawa this June with our partner EtonHouse Japan.

As I finish this blog post in Shoreditch House London after spending the last 2 days at BETT 2019, the one thing I am really proud of in 2018 is the amazing team we’ve built at Saturday Kids.

We are now almost 30 people (as recently as early 2017 we were still a team of 4), not including the Wunder team in Kazakhstan. 

Everyone on the team is passionate about Saturday Kids’ mission of making kids curious, self-directed learners.

Just as importantly, we have managed to hire folks with big hearts who genuinely want to do more for disadvantaged communities.

I am excited about what we can achieve with this team in 2019, and I hope you (and your child) will join us on this journey to learn how to learn.

John

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