BBC BASIC for Windows
« Resource or forum for teachers and pupils »

Welcome Guest. Please Login or Register.
Apr 5th, 2018, 9:51pm



ATTENTION MEMBERS: Conforums will be closing it doors and discontinuing its service on April 15, 2018.
Ad-Free has been deactivated. Outstanding Ad-Free credits will be reimbursed to respective payment methods.

If you require a dump of the post on your message board, please come to the support board and request it.


Thank you Conforums members.

BBC BASIC for Windows Resources
Online BBC BASIC for Windows documentation
BBC BASIC for Windows Beginners' Tutorial
BBC BASIC Home Page
BBC BASIC on Rosetta Code
BBC BASIC discussion group
BBC BASIC for Windows Programmers' Reference

« Previous Topic | Next Topic »
Pages: 1  Notify Send Topic Print
 thread  Author  Topic: Resource or forum for teachers and pupils  (Read 2186 times)
Richey
New Member
Image


member is offline

Avatar




PM

Gender: Male
Posts: 35
xx Resource or forum for teachers and pupils
« Thread started on: Feb 1st, 2014, 10:05am »

Richard, just thinking about programming being made compulsory in English primary schools and if there might be some opportunities there to get teachers and pupils to use BB4W - would it be useful to set up a 'school' / teacher / pupil section to the conforum or maybe even a separate conforum / site to act as a resource for them, or somewhere they can post questions, examples of work, etc.? I know they could use the existing conforum sections (assuming there are no age limits) but maybe a more dedicated / school / age specific resource might prove attractive to teachers, pupils and parents...somewhere they know where to go to specifically to share ideas, experiences, showcase work, etc...just thinking how to promote BB4W instead of them going to Python by default...
User IP Logged

admin
Administrator
ImageImageImageImageImage


member is offline

Avatar




PM


Posts: 1145
xx Re: Resource or forum for teachers and pupils
« Reply #1 on: Feb 1st, 2014, 11:17am »

on Feb 1st, 2014, 10:05am, Richey wrote:
would it be useful to set up a 'school' / teacher / pupil section to the conforum or maybe even a separate conforum / site to act as a resource for them, or somewhere they can post questions, examples of work, etc.?

I'm afraid you're somewhat out-of-touch, because exactly that has existed for quite a while:

https://groups.google.com/forum/#!forum/bbc-basic-ict

If you know of any teachers who might be unaware of that group please feel free to pass on the link. All UK secondary schools have received a mailshot, but there are too many primary schools for that option to be viable/economic.

Richard.
User IP Logged

Richey
New Member
Image


member is offline

Avatar




PM

Gender: Male
Posts: 35
xx Re: Resource or forum for teachers and pupils
« Reply #2 on: Feb 2nd, 2014, 10:18pm »

Ok thanks Richard - perhaps those of us with primary school age children can all mention it to the teachers.

I'll send an email to Michael Gove and Huw Lewis (Welsh Minister) - don't know if it will help but they have probably at least heard of BBC BASIC (maybe even used it!) - not sure the same can be said of Python.

I know that many schools are using Raspberry PI but I'm not sure about the availability of BB4W on that platform as a means of getting it further into schools?

I have heard that the BBC and considering another project aimed at encouraging computer programming:

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/technology-24446046

I wonder if that might be another opportunity to promote BB4W?

May all be dead ends but just trying to think of different possibilities... smiley
User IP Logged

admin
Administrator
ImageImageImageImageImage


member is offline

Avatar




PM


Posts: 1145
xx Re: Resource or forum for teachers and pupils
« Reply #3 on: Feb 2nd, 2014, 11:14pm »

on Feb 2nd, 2014, 10:18pm, Richey wrote:
I know that many schools are using Raspberry PI but I'm not sure about the availability of BB4W on that platform

If you choose the RISC OS option for the Operating System then ARM BBC BASIC (BASIC 5) comes installed as standard. If you choose Linux (which is more popular) there may be a version of Brandy that will run, but I'm not certain.

I would like to see somebody take an interest in BBC BASIC on non-Windows platforms, to investigate exactly what is currently available, where it can be obtained, how it is installed and what features it has. Any takers?

I am also looking for somebody who knows how to program in C or assembler on a (x86) Linux platform, with a view to porting BB4W. If interested please contact me privately.

Richard.
User IP Logged

bbcchris2000
New Member
Image


member is offline

Avatar




PM


Posts: 1
xx Re: Resource or forum for teachers and pupils
« Reply #4 on: Feb 9th, 2014, 7:36pm »

Hi,
In post 1101 Richard wrote

"I would like to see somebody take an interest in BBC BASIC on non-Windows platforms, to investigate exactly what is currently available, where it can be obtained, how it is installed and what features it has. Any takers?"

I currently have a version of Brandy loaded into an Axim X5 running on a PPC 2003 O/S. It can be downloaded from this web site
http://www.g7jjf.com/brandy_for_wince.htm
.

The current development does open a screen and basic program listings can be typed in and run. There is no select, copy and paste features: there is one folder it can load and save from, it doesn't appear to have any way to surf other folders: the bottom portion of a program listing gets covered up by the Axim X5's on screen keyboard.

These limitations make it more or less useless for me to use in any serious way. I have been in touch with the developer and in his response he stated that he no longer has any hand held computers to test with and I got the general feel that he is no longer interested to continue development.

Hope this information is helpful.

I also hope someone can continue the development. The idea that some Bbcbasic4windows program listings can, with a little modification, be run on a hand held PC does appeal to me.

Regards Chris
User IP Logged

freeman69
New Member
Image


member is offline

Avatar




PM


Posts: 3
xx Re: Resource or forum for teachers and pupils
« Reply #5 on: Jun 17th, 2014, 11:08am »

There's a new BB4W website here:
http://freeman69.moonfruit.com/

The idea was inspired by the forthcoming changes to the national curriculum. The content may be a little advanced, but as a youngster I would have wanted access to a similar resource.

Any feedback can be directed to freeman69@gmx.com
User IP Logged

JGHarston
Junior Member
ImageImage


member is offline

Avatar




Homepage PM

Gender: Male
Posts: 52
xx Re: Resource or forum for teachers and pupils
« Reply #6 on: Jun 28th, 2014, 4:41pm »

on Jun 17th, 2014, 11:08am, freeman69 wrote:
There's a new BB4W website here:
http://freeman69.moonfruit.com/
I've had a quick skim through the examples, and none of them need line numbers, and their use is distracting and misleading.
User IP Logged

freeman69
New Member
Image


member is offline

Avatar




PM


Posts: 3
xx Re: Resource or forum for teachers and pupils
« Reply #7 on: Jun 30th, 2014, 09:55am »

@JGHarston: Perhaps you've noted that the examples are on a website that contains explanations and references to the code - otherwise I don't use line numbering because its unnecessary. BB4W can show/remove line numbering quite easily.
User IP Logged

Pages: 1  Notify Send Topic Print
« Previous Topic | Next Topic »

| |

This forum powered for FREE by Conforums ©
Terms of Service | Privacy Policy | Conforums Support | Parental Controls