INTL was the perfect fit to host this year’s conference because TeenTechSF’s collaborative, innovative approach to educating and inspiring teens very closely aligns with INTL’s own mission. The organizing theme of the spring conference was “Collaborate and Communicate: The Language of Tech,” a familiar concept at INTL, where we have established computer science and coding as the school’s “4th language.”
The day began in the Rothschild Multipurpose room, where attendees were eager to listen to the conference’s keynote speaker, Tony Fadell, founder and CEO of Nest, “godfather of the iPod,” and author of more than 300 patents.
“That’s how it works in this business. You are going to fail a lot…but you just keep trying…the only way I got to where I am today is by continually tripping and falling…that’s the way you learn.”
In a special session for parents, INTL’s Technology Coordinator, Véronique Merckling presented about INTL’s computer science curriculum, its purpose and the philosophy behind it.
Véronique explains, “Our curriculum integrates technology into the classroom. We want students to learn to think about problems in different ways, and to apply the skills they learn in computer science activities to many different types of problems they encounter. Computational thinking helps students solve problems in a collaborative and creative way. The parents who attended the talk all commented that they all understood better what their children are learning and why.”
In addition to TeenTechSF founder Marc Robert Wong, Jeremy Rossmann, INTL alumnus and founder of Make School, led a breakout session about video game development. INTL Alumna Sara Fay also live-tweeted the conference, sharing pictures and giving her thoughts on the experience in real time.
It was wonderful to see INTL students and alumni come together for a common cause, and TeenTechSF @ INTL proved to be an invigorating, educational day.
Thank you to all the students, parents, teachers, and volunteers who made the conference such a success!
*In 2020, the International School of the Peninsula (ISTP) formally changed its name to Silicon Valley International School (INTL) to better reflect its bilingual programs, location, and international values.