Difference between revisions of "Turtle Art"

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==[[Turtle_Art_Week_1|Lesson 1 - Moving the Turtle]]==
 
==[[Turtle_Art_Week_1|Lesson 1 - Moving the Turtle]]==
 
==[[Turtle_art_lesson_2|Lesson 2 -Make the Turtle Move with different inputs and to display outputs]]==
 
==[[Turtle_art_lesson_2|Lesson 2 -Make the Turtle Move with different inputs and to display outputs]]==
==[[Turtle_art_lesson_3|Lesson 3 - Making two sprites interact]]==
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==[[Turtle_art_lesson_3|Lesson 3 - Simplifying programming – repeating instructions and blocks]]==
 
==[[Turtle_art_lesson_4|Lesson 4 - Adding conditions to make the Sprite do things]]==
 
==[[Turtle_art_lesson_4|Lesson 4 - Adding conditions to make the Sprite do things]]==
 
==[[Turtle_art_lesson_5|Lesson 5 - Defining variables and using operators to build a simulation]]==
 
==[[Turtle_art_lesson_5|Lesson 5 - Defining variables and using operators to build a simulation]]==

Revision as of 11:41, 22 April 2015

Introduction

Turtle Art is a logo based programming environment for introducing students to the basics of programming. We can use this to develop visualiation, logical reasoning and algorithmic sense in students by performing various operations with the Turtle. This is a brief introduction to a sample of lessons using Turtle. More information can be found on

Course Outline

Lesson 1 - Moving the Turtle

Lesson 2 -Make the Turtle Move with different inputs and to display outputs

Lesson 3 - Simplifying programming – repeating instructions and blocks

Lesson 4 - Adding conditions to make the Sprite do things

Lesson 5 - Defining variables and using operators to build a simulation

Lesson 6 - Making a project in Scratch

Turtle art Lesson template

Please use this as an initial outline; create lesson pages separately and then you can delete this

  • Objectives
  • Demonstration activities by teacher in class
  • Student hands-on activities
  • Assessment ideas/ portfolio