This site is dedicated to helping parents (including grandparents and caregivers) nurture computational thinking skills among preschoolers (4 to 7 years).
Intellectual Futures is founded by Zaid Hamzah - bio here.
We provide programs that promote family bonding while nurturing computational thinking skills against the larger context of thinking skills in general. We do not focus narrowly on the 4 elements usually associated with computational thinking - ie decomposition, pattern recognition, abstraction and algorithmic thinking.
Our programs include:
We are based in Singapore. We are interested in expanding our programs throughout Asia, the Middle East, and Africa.
In the future, we plan to provide data services related to computational skills development. These future data services will help organizations and regulators in the early childhood care and education sectore to analyze big data for the purpose of customizing educational contents to suit the learners and providing continuing assessments as part of the child's long term development journey.
Founder
Zaid Hamzah is a data/AI practitioner and educator. An Executive Education Fellow at the National University of Singapore’s School of Computing, Advanced Computing for Executives, Zaid specializes in teaching data and AI concepts and practices to non-technical audiences. He focuses on the soft skills to manage “hard” technologies like data analytics and machine learning. Zaid has over 20 years of technology experience including serving as Director at Microsoft and Legal Advisor to a media joint venture between Singtel, Warner Bros and Sony Pictures. As a learning strategist, Zaid conducts training in data and AI innovation including teaching parents of young children (4 to 12 years) on how to nurture computational thinking among young learners.
Email: [email protected]
Computational thinking is increasingly considered a critical skill for the 21st century along with reading, writing, and arithmetic. Our programs will help parents prepare their young ones for a digital future that is increasingly driven by big data and AI.
In our programs, we focus on family bonding while equipping parents with knowledge and skills to nurture their children with computational thinking skills.
Computational thinking can be defined to include a set of skills needed to analyze a problem in a way that helps people deal better with such problems and if needed to be better prepared to use computers to solve problems.
Targeting parents with children aged 4 to below 7 years old, our programs provide parents with the knowledge and skills to be educators to their own children in nurturing computational thinking skills.
In our programs, we cover computational thinking that is contextualized against thinking skills in general.
As you can see from the chart below, there is an overlap between the area of thinking skills in general and computational thinking.
In general, most experts and writers agree that computational thinking covers the following 4 elements:
In our programs, we cover computational thinking that is contextualized against thinking skills in general.
As you can see from the chart above, there are elements of computational thinking that overlap with the elements of thinking skills in general.
Computational thinking is not the same as coding or software programming. Computational thinking can be done without any computer screen or devices. Computational thinking provides the foundation for young learners to learn coding in the future.
Our advice to parents - nurturing computational skills among preschoolers should not be done in isolation. Neither should you overly focus on computational thinking simply because you want your kids to be ready to be more IT-savvy.
It must be developed as part of a child’s holistic development covering: (1) motor skills development (2) language and literacy (3) numeracy (4) social and emotional development (5) aesthetic and creative expressions (6) discovery of the world.
Our program provides the knowledge and skills for parents to nurture computational thinking skills of their preschoolers without any special equipment. Using everyday situations such as having a meal, travelling to school or walking in the park, this guidebook guides parents on how they can carry out these activities to nurture computational thinking skills while promoting family bonding.
As the world we live in deepens in the use of technology, young children need to be prepared for the digital future which is increasingly driven by big data and artificial intelligence. Nurturing computational skills in the school system is becoming increasingly mainstream just as basic thinking skills have been around for decades.
Computational thinking is increasingly considered as a critical skill for the 21st century along with reading, writing and arithmetic. Our programs will help parents prepare their young ones for a digital future that is increasingly driven by big data and AI.
Our programs seek to equip parents with the knowledge and skills for parents to nurture computational thinking skills of their preschoolers without any special equipment.
Using everyday situation such as having a meal, travelling to school or walking in the park, this guidebook guides parents on how they can carry out these activities to nurture computational thinking skills while promoting family bonding.
For example, when parents walk with their child in a park, this outing can be transformed into a learning experience by the parents doing the following:
Consider next, using your app to move from Point A (for example below your flat) to Point B (a nearby McDonald’s). You may ask Google Assist (a type of AI) how to get from one location to another. When your child hears the voice from the tablet giving you directions, you can ask “How is this tablet able to show us the directions?” – you can then indicate that it is done through an algorithm (step-by-step instructions written out as codes in software development). Algorithms can be said to be the “heart” of computational thinking.
In our programs, we nurture computational thinking skills that are contextualized against thinking skills in general.
In our program we do not narrowly focus on the 4 main elements of computational thinking only. We cover all key process skills in thinking skills in general.
To nurture thinking skills among preschoolers, educators in general focus on the preschoolers’ foundational process skills to:
With these basic process skills, the child can be nurtured to be better able to:
Thinking and Intelligence
Thinking is not the same as intelligence. As Edward de Bono, the leading pioneer in the direct teaching of thinking, points out:
“The relationship between intelligence and thinking is like that between a car and the driver of the car. A powerful car may be driven badly. A less powerful car may be driven well. The power of the car is the potential of the car just as intelligence is the potential of the mind. The skill of the car driver determines how the power of the car is used. The skill of the thinker determines how intelligence is used."
Process Skills in Thinking
There are specific concepts and techniques in teaching thinking skills that you as a parent can share with your child. In our program, we equip parents with the knowledge and skills to nurture thinking skills that cover the ability to:
Contact the founder of Intellectual Futures, Zaid Hamzah (he/him) on WhatsApp at +65-93705982 or email [email protected].
Alternatively, submit our Contact Form below.